rORTY BE/ 



LIBRPRY OF CONGRESS 



014 068 517 3 



FORTY BEACHES 



HIGIAND-WATER RESORTS fflGHlAND-WM RESORTS 




NEW JERSEY'S 



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FORTY BEACHES 



THE groatpsf pleasure resort secliim in ihe 
\v( irld i-- I he \\iin(l<'rfiil stretch of beach ami 
inlet aioiii; I he coast line of New Jersey froei 
Cape Ma\- lo Long Branch. Its forty ditferenl 
centers are \'isiteil \car after year liy tiiousands 
of persons in search of health and recreation. 

Nature has di\ ided this pla\grounfl into three 
sections, alike in I heir appeal to the pleasure and 
health seeker, hut ditlering in I he plu'sical char- 
acteristics of the resorts and the siirruunding 
territory. 

The southern resftrts all lii' upon islands sepa- 
rateil fiiiiii the ni.iinl.nid In' stretches of sea- 
meadow ,uid winding inlets and hays. Then* 
an- se\-en of these island beaches, with wonder- 
ful ocean fronts sjielving ofif to seaward at such 
a slight angle that surf bathing is delightful and 
safe for a considerable distance from the actual 
shore line. Hack ol these islands are the many 
deep water channels wlii( h the government is 
utilizing for an inland waterway. One inay 
sail from (ape May to the norlh<'rn end of 
Harnegat Hay without going beyond the breaker 
line. 

In sharp contrast with the lower or southern 
p. Ill ol ihi' New Jersey Coast, the beaches ol 
the northern or upper half are directls' on the 
ni.iinl.ind; lorest and farm land at limes en- 
croaching so closely on the shore line that ther(> 
is but a few feet between them. As (jiie goes 
I ml her north along the shore, the sand dunes of 
Absecon Miml and Island Beach become the 



clifls 111 Klberon, West End .ind Long Br.inch, 
where the actual beach at high tide is but a few 
feet wiik', and the resort itself lies high abo\'e the 
ocean level. 

A notable teainre of this section is the number 
of small fresh and semi-fresh water lakes King 
within a few feet of the bre.dcer line, with but a 
n.irrow strip f)f beach to prcNent the surging surf 
from riittling the pl.icid siirf.ice of the lake. 
These in\ite to canoeing and kindred ple.isnres 
not possible in the boisterous surf. 

Between the upper and lower coast sections 
lies the Barnegal Bay region, one of the most 
noied .ingling grounds in ihe world. Mshernien 
from all parts of the United States come thither 
for the line sport to bi' hafl. 

Barnegat Ray, extending from fJay Head on 
ihe north to Barnegal Inlet at the end of Island 
Beach, on the south, with M.mah.iukrn Hay and 
Little Egg Harbor Bay offers e\ery pleasure 
known to lo\'ers of the seashore. 

.\t Beach !l.i\en and the other resorts on 
Long Beach, .md Seaside Park and its neighliors 
on Island Beach, one ma\' enjoy the finest surf 
Iiathing; while at Island Heights, Toms River, 
Luckerton .md oiher resorts on the shoreward 
■ ide ol the i^re.it b.iy. one ma\' ha\e the country 
and the sailing ground combined. ( )ne may 
bathe; fish; seek the elusixc duck .ind snipe; 
motor through a most di-lightful pastoral coun- 
ir\', or swap tales wiih hoars' m.iriiiers around 
the post office stove — all within a few miles. 



I 



SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY 



rift&i 








ATLANTIC CITY'S MAGNIFICENT OCEAN FRONT 



ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. 

From all parts of the civilized world come the people that 
make up the throng which year by year fills Atlantic City's 
hotels and crowds its famous Boardwalk. All nationalities and 
every taste find something appealing in its cosmopolitan life 
and its varied amusements. There is but one Atlantic City 
on all the globe. 

Built upon an island five miles out at sea, Atlantic City enjoys 
a peculiarly equable climate. Facing almost directly south, 
so that the sun's rays are always caught, summer and winter; 
with the Gulf Stream very close to the shore, and the New Jersey 
pine belt but a few miles away across the salt meadows, its 
temperature is always comfortable. 

During the summer months it is rare that there is not a good 
breeze blowing either directly from the ocean or across the 
wide stretches of bay, thoroughfare or salt meadow that tempers 
the heat of the sun. In the spring and fall there is a snappiness 
that brings roses to the cheeks, and during the frozen months of 
winter the warm influence of the Gulf Stream lessens the dis- 
comfort of icy conditions elsewhere. 

Thus Atlantic City is an all-the-year-around place for recrea- 
tion and many of its fine hotels never close their doors. The 
local slogan is "Atlantic City All the Time." 

But it is as a typical American summer resort that Atlantic 
City is pre-eminent. Hither come, in search of relaxation from 
the daily routine, financial and business men, with their automo- 
biles, and working men with their lunch baskets and the family. 
Both are equally welcome, and both find something doing that 
makes life brighter and better. 

Wonderful hotels that rival the finest in the great metro- 
politan cities and those adapted to the wants of the less luxurious; 
theatres; great piers stretching far out beyond the breakers; 
stores displaying the wares of both Occident and Orient; base- 
ball; golf; fine dancing floors; entrancing concerts; surf bathing 
under safe conditions; sailing, fishing and the greatest Board- 



walk the world knows — all these are there and waiting for the 
visitor. 

Atlantic City's Boardwalk is world famed. A steel esplanade, 
sixty feet wide for two mUes and forty feet wide for three miles, 
and twelve feet above the sand, it is the great meeting place for 
the world and his brother. It fronts the resort from the Inlet 
(the point from which yachting trips are made through the 
various thoroughfares and bay and out to sea) all the way to 
Ventnor, a suburb of Atlantic City to the southwest; and for 
the greater part of its length it is lined with fine shops and hotels 
on the landward side, although entirely open to the sea on the 
ocean side except where the six amusement piers extend into 
the sea. 

Six of these piers are in daily use. The Steel Pier and Young's 
Million Dollar Pier are now the longest and largest of these 
over-sea amusement places. The former has one of the prettiest 
Music Halls in the country located on its seaward end, where 
fine concerts are given during the season. There is also a smaller 
hall for concerts, a dancing pavilion and theatre. The Million 
Dollar Pier has a fine ball-room and convention hall, where the 
larger conventions are held; and in addition a theatre, hippodrome 
ana aquarium. Fish net hauls twice daily bring many thousands 
of visitors to the pier each day. Young's old pier, partially 
destroyed by fire, has been largely rebuilt. The Garden Pier, 
with beautiful floricultural decorations and a high class vaudeville 
theatre, the Steeplechase Pier, the home of varied amusement 
devices, and Heinz's Pier, complete the list of over-sea enter- 
tainment enterprises. 

The sea bathing at Atlantic City has always been one of the 
great features of its life. During the summer season hundreds 
of thousands of persons disport in the surf or loll on the wide 
sloping beach. Of late years many hardy persons have been 
in the habit of taking a daily bath, both summer and winter. 
During the summer months life boats and life guards are ever 
ready to assist the over-venturesome bather who may have 
gotten beyond his depth, or who may be in need of help. 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



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Absecon Inlet, at the upper end of the city, connects the sta 
with a large number of sheltered thoroughfares and waterways, 
which give opportunity for still water sailing, motor boating, 
rowing, fishing and crabbing. For those who prefer sailing on 
the open ocean, a fleet of fine yachts is always in command at 
the Inlet Pier, and make regular trips out beyond the breaker 
line. Motor boats and sailing and row boats may also be 
obtained. 

To the man who owns his own yacht, the new club house of 
the Atlantic City Yacht Club, located at North Massachusetts 
Avenue and Gardiner's Basin, oflers at once a comfortable 
anchorage and an opportunity to join in the many social events 
planned during the season by the large and influential member- 
ship of the Club. 

The golfer and tennis player has the choice of two finely 
appointed country clubs, located on the mainland, within ea.^y 
distance of Atlantic City. 

The Atlantic City Country Club is 
located at Northticld station, on the Atlan- 
tic City and Shore Railroad just south of 
Pleasantville, and directly accessible by a 
fine motoring and driving road across the 
meadows. There are eighteen holes, with 
a playing length of 6016 yards, which are 
utilized the year around for championship 
and private matches, and a commodious 
club house that is the scene of many 
picturesque outdoor and indoor events 
during the entire season. 

The Sea View Golf Club, opened this 
year, is located ten miles from Atlantic 
City on the automobile 
road from Atlantic City 
to New York. This club, 
which has a member- 
ship comprised of the 
leading men and women 
of New York, Philadel- 
phia, Chicago, Pitts- 
burgh, Buflfalo, Balti- 
more, Washington, and 
other large cities, has 
laid out an eighteen hole 
course which is unsur- 
passed in this country 
or even by the famous 
courses of the Old Coun- 
try. The club house is 
a marvel of beauty, com- 
fort and convenience, 
with luxurious furnish- 
ings. A swimming pool, 
baths and showers, 
ample locker accommo- 
dations and fine dining and lounging rooms make it a delight- 
ful place to visit. There are one hundred and fifty sleeping 
rooms for the use of members and invited guests. 

Wonderful roadways extend from Atlantic City in many 
directions offering splendid chances for motor and driving trips 
to neighboring resorts and through the picturesque country lying 
to the west of Atlantic City. 

The electric car service on Atlantic Avenue links all sections 
of the city from the Inlet to Chelsea so that rapid transit is 
afTorded from the cottage settlements on either end of the island 
with the heart of the resort. 

The through electric car service over the Atlantic City and 
Shore Railroad between Atlantic City and Ocean City by the 
way of Pleasantville and Somers Point affords most delightful 
opportunities for visits between residents of the four resorts. 




CHELSEA, N. J. 

Lying directly south of Atlantic City proper and forming a 
part of the municipality (which is a well laid out city with a 
permanent population approximating one hundred thousand) is 
Chelsea, where every avenue is lined with fine cottages and more 
pretentious villas, the homes of those who do not care for the 
more strenuous life of the center of the resort. Many of these 
cottages are occupied the wh6le year by business men of Phila- 
delphia who commute daily between Atlantic City and their 
places of business. This section has been kept free from the 
many amusement features of Atlantic City life, but its residents 
are within a few minutes ride or walk of the heart of Atlantic 
City. The bathing beach here is as good as that in the main city. 
Not only is it the scene of gay parties enjoying a plunge in the 
surf, but it is a paradise for the children. 



VENTNOR, N. J. 

Adjoining the Chelsea 
section of Atlantic City 
is Ventnor, a separate 
resort, but closely allied 
with Atlantic City b}' its 
electric car line, the ex- 
tension of the great 
Boardwalk and the 
$150,000 boulevard 
through its limits, mak- 
ing Yentnor, Chelsea, 
and Atlantic City prac- 
tically one. Like Chel- 
sea, Ventnor is a settle- 
ment of cottages, many 
of which are unrivalled 
for beauty and magnifi- 
cence on the Atlantic 
Coast. 




COTTAGES 

AT 
VENTNOR 



SEA VIEW GOLF CLUB HOUSE 



MARGATE CITY, N. J. 

A SOMEWHAT newer settlement, linked to 
Atlantic City by the extension of Atlantic 
Avenue, is Margate City, which lies some 
miles down the island. Many pretty homes 
of a modest type have been built on this 
section, some fronting on the ocean and 
some on the Thorofare which drains Lake's 
Bay. The Thorofare has become noted 
as a fine course for speedy motor boats. A 

number of boathouses are located both at Ventnor and 

Margate City. 

LONGPORT, N. J. 

At the extreme southern end of Absecon Island is Longport, 
a small settlement of cottages and hotels, which fronts on the 
ocean. Egg Harbor Inlet and the Thorofare. With a good 
bathing beach and excellent sailing facilities on Great Egg 
Harbor Bay, Longport makes a fine summer home for those 
desiring natural diversions. 

All of these resorts are linked with Atlantic City by the service 
of the electric line, which also connects with the steamer 
plying between Longport and Ocean City during the summer 
season. 



#- 



(For list of hotels, see pages ^O-.U. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



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OCEAN CITY'S BOARDWALK 

OCEAN CITY, N. J. 

Directly south of Atlantic City, separated from it by Egg 
Harbor Inlet, and from the mainland by Great Egg Harbor Bay 
and the State Inland Waterway, is Ocean City, occupying the 
greater part of an island seven miles long. 

Laid out many years ago as a camp meeting site, Ocean City 
has long since passed beyond the ideas of its founders, although 
retaining much that was good in the thoughts of those who 
hoped to make here a summering place that would be free from 
the influence of mere worldly pleasure. 

One of the notable features of its life has been the entire 
absence of saloons and the liquor influence, and its rapid strides 
in popularity have been due to the flocking thither of those who 
desired a summer home combining seashore life on beach and 
water; the finest surf bathing; large semi-enclosed sailing, 
motoring and fishing grounds, and every feature of Boardwalk 
life except the cafes. 

Ocean City is distinctly a city of homes. For several miles 
along both ocean and bay fronts, there are fine avenues lined 
with handsome villas and cottages, mostly owned by Philadel- 
phia business men, who commute during the heated term. 
Interspersed are fine hotels which offer comfortable accommoda- 
tions to those who desire to escape the burden of housekeeping 
during the seashore stay. A number of fine apartment hotels 
offer this mode of living to those who prefer it. 

The health conditions at Ocean City are almost ideal. Enjoy- 
ing the same advantages of position with reference to the Gulf 
Stream and the Pine Belt with Atlantic City, like the former 
its all-the-year climate is most delightful. It is stated on good 
medical authority that nearly every death in the resort has 
been the result either of extreme old age, or of disease-racked 
conditions that no climatic influence could offset. 

Not only during the summer, but during the other months of 
the year, the weather conditions at Ocean City are ideal for 
convalescents and those seeking freedom from the ice-clad 
winter. A number of the larger hotels keep open house the 
entire year and while many of the amusement features are 
lacking during the winter months, Ocean City, like Atlantic 
City has developed into an all-year resting place. 

Ocean City has many of the advantages of Atlantic City in 
the way of fine stores, banks and other places of business. One 



H 



can locate here for the whole summer and find everything 
nt -ded for everyday life right in the city. Good street car 
service connects nearly every section of the city with every other 
part, making visiting between cottagers, even though remote 
f n im each other, a pleasure. 

The streets are wide and all well graded and lighted. Excel- 
lent water is furnished and both gas and electricity available for 
h> -use lighting. The sewerage system is as near perfect as the 
ciiy can get, ensuring healthfulness in that respect. 

l-.ike Atlantic City, Ocean City prides itself on its Boardwalk, 
which is thirty feet wide, and extends along the beach front for 
about three miles. While none of the hotels of th^ resort front 
on tliis Boardwalk, as at Atlantic City, there are a number of 
g" id shops on the landward side, and several piers and resting 
[I .ilions break the open prospect of the ocean on the sea side. 
he City's Music Pavihon is a unique feature of Ocean City, 
ein are given daily concerts in the afternoon and evening by 
.1 '.ne musical organization. There are also theatrical per- 
fijiinances and moving picture exhibits on other piers and along 
the Boardwalk. 

The beach is one of the finest for surf bathing along the 
Atlantic coast. Very wide and extending into the breakers with 
a very gradual descent, a plunge into the surf may be enjoyed 
by young and old with equal safety and pleasure. 

As a paradise for amateur sailors, fishermen and motor boat 
enthusiasts. Ocean City is well known. Great Egg Harbor 
Bay, a broad island-dotted reach, extending back of the greater 
p;'tt of the resort, and for some miles back into the mainland, 
is a superb cruising ground. 

The Ocean City Yacht Club and the Ocean City Motor Boat 
Club maintain fine club houses here, and project a number of 
sporting events and social gatherings during the season. The 
Pcnnsjdvania Railroad Y. M. C. A. maintains a fine summer 
club house on the bay side of Ocean City, whose members add 
to the colony of yachtsmen and fishermen. 

A fine base-ball team, composed of college men, affords lovers 
of the great American game a treat during the entire summer. 
Tennis is available right in the city, and the golfer may reach 
the fine links of the Atlantic City Club by the Atlantic City 
and Shore Railroad service to Northfield. Atlantic City and 
Ocean City are linked by the fast and frequent electric line 
service of this company, which operates through cars from 
Ocean City's Boardwalk to the Boardwalk of Atlantic City. 










OCEAN CITY YACHT CLUB 



(For lists of hotels, see pages 3^33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



SEA ISLE CITY, N. J. 

To the south of Ocean City, the ocean breaks into the line c : 
sandy beaches in what is known as Corson's Inlet, and washc- 
back among the salt marshes in many small winding channel- 
in which lurk thousands of gamy fish awaiting the prowess cl 
an Isaac Walton. Seven miles beyond is another break in thc 
beach where Townsend's Inlet stretches back from the breakers 
into the marshes. 

On the solid section of beach between these two (known a^ 
Ludlam's Beach) is Sea Isle City, which, while not so large as 
its neighbor, is a summering place much favored by those tn 
whom the conventions of the more populous resorts do not 
appeal. 

Not only does Sea Isle City enjoy a beach that is fully equal 
to Ocean City's for width and safety for surf bathing, but it 
is a noted center for fishermen and hunters, to whom the hundreds 
of fishing grounds in and near Corson's 
and Townsend's Inlets are a veritable 
Mecca. 

Very large catches of the smaller salt 
water fish may be made in these back 
reaches and in the inlets. If one desires 
deep sea fishing, there is opportunity to 
visit the fishing groundsbeyond the banks. 

There are a number of good hotels and 
comfortable cottages at Sea Isle City, ,. 

and a wide boardwalk along the sea wall 
which has been constructed to protect 
the resort from the encroaching tides. 

AVALON, N. J. 

On Seven Mile Beach, divided from 
Ludlam's Beach by Townsend's Inlet, 
and from Five Mile Beach, by Hereford 
Inlet, a number of newer settlements of 
cottages and hotels have been estab- 
lished, of which one is Avalon. 

Located on the widest stretch of beach 
islands south of Atlantic City, Avalon 
has been developed by energetic capital 
into a prosperous resort which enjoys a 
good bathing beach, fine sailing and 



ft— 





STONE HARBORSS WIDE BEACH 



COTTAGES AT AVALON 

motor-boating on the inland channels 
and Great Sound, with fishing, and all 
the benefits of a carefully planned town. 
Practically every breeze that blows 
over Avalon is a salt one, for it is sur- 
rounded by water on every side, and the 
west breezes, blowing over the wide 
stretch of Delaware Bay, here only ten 
miles away, are filtered through the pine 
belt and again charged with salt in passing 
over Great Sound. 

STONE HARBOR, N. J. 

Noted for many years as a fishing 
resort. Stone Harbor, occupying the 
southern point of Seven Mile Beach, 
has rapidly forged to the front within 
the past decade as a popular summer 
resort. Capital and enterprise has 
located here a colony of hotels and fine 
cottages and bungalows that rival many 
another older place in point of comfort 
and beauty, and earn for it the sobriquet 
of "The Wonder City by the Sea." 

Like all of the resorts on the southern 
half of the coast, Stone Harbor offers a 
most salubrious all-the-year-around climate tempered by the 
breezes always playing over the ocean and Great Sound, and 
its water supply is ample and entirely free from any chance 
of malarial infection. 

Stone Harbor's beach is similar in character to that at Ocean 
City, Sea Isle City, Wildwood and Cape May. It is a very 
gentle incline into the breakers and affords the safest kind of 
surf bathing. 

It has a three mile frontage on the new State Inland Water- 
way, which is now being dredged from Cape May to Bay Head. 
Five large yacht and motor boat basins have been constructed 
at Stone Harbor to accommodate the largely increasing number 
of yachtsmen who throng here during the summer season. 

There is hourly motor boat service during the summer between 
Stone Harbor and Anglesea, and the new bridge connecting 
Stone Harbor with the mainland has stimulated motoring within 
the past year. 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see 34-37.) 







f f ■ I f 
1 



1^1* p-a^. 






A SUMMER DAY ON WILOWOOD BEACH 



ANGLESEA, N. J. 



t 



There are probably no places along the North Atlantic 
Coast where there are more opportunities for enjoying a day's 
fishing than at Anglesea, the most northern of the resorts making 
up the group which occupies Five Mile Beach, lying just south 
of Stone Harbor. 

Although favored by not a few persons as a summering home, 
Anglesea is primarily a resort for the fisherman or woman who 
comes down for the day on the ocean or sounds. A fine fleet o£^ 
ably-manned yachts finds anchorage at its piers, ready to taki 
the fisherman away out on the ocean to the banks, or into thi 
shallow back channels for the smaller fish. 

Few indeed are those who visit Anglesea who do not retu: 
from one of these trips with a fine catch of deep sea fish whicl 
well repays the effort of coming. 



WILDWOOD, N. J. 

The City of Wildwood, including the resorts known as North 
Wildwood, Wildwood, Holly Beach and Wildwood Crest, shares 
with Atlantic City, Asbury Park, and Ocean City, the distinction 
of being one of the most popular seashore resorts in the world. 

Wildwood, itself, has had a most phenomenal growth, almost 
within the past decade. When a little settlement of modest 
cottages was established among the curiously-gnarled wildwood 
growth from which the place takes its name, few ever imagined 
that within ten years it would be a populous all-the-year-around 
city, with a summer population that many large manufacturing 
cities in the country cannot equal. 

Laid out with wide avenues, along which have been constructed 
fine hotels and cottages, with all the conveniences of city life 
in the way of stores, banks and churches, the city has spread 
until it occupies almost the whole of the five miles of island. 

A fine Boardwalk, almost as wide and as long as Atlantic 
City's famous esplanade, extends along the seaward side of the 
chain of resorts, from which four fine piers extend oceanward 
and a number of good stores and amusement enterprises line 
the land side. 



Theatres presenting popular attractions; a bathing beach that 
is broad and shallow in descent into the breakers and amply 
protected by life guards; all the amusement devices of the 
better class, and fine roads for motoring and driving, make 
Wildwood a resort well worth visiting. 

The old trees which were once a feature of the town are 
gradually disappearing as building operations spread, but some 
curious specimens may still be seen. 



NORTH WILDWOOD, N. J. 

This is the section of the city lying directly north of Wildwood 
proper beyond Twenty-sixth Street. This is almost exclusively 
a cottage settlement, scores of beautiful homes having been 
erected along the finely graded and paved avenues. 



HOLLY BEACH, N. J. 

Th.\t part of Wildwood lying south of the Wildwood station 
is known as Holly Beach, and like North Wildwood is largely 
a cottage settlement, although a number of hotels and apart- 
ment houses are located there. A roadway extends from Holly 
Beach across the channels and meadows to the mainland, which 
is used by motor car drivers in reaching the Wildwood resorts. 



WILDWOOD CREST, N. J. 

The southern end of Five Mile Beach is a somewhat new 
resort known as Wildwood Crest, which has become very popular. 
Developed by Wildwood enterprise, hundreds of handsome 
residences have been built and hotels opened. 

The fine club house of the Wildwood Yacht Club, located on 
the new inland waterway back of the resort, supplies a delightful 
social center for its large and enthusiastic membership. There 
is fishing in the inlets on either end of the Five Mile Beach as 
well as in the thorofares and bays back of it. 



(For list of hotels see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



^- 



CAPE MAY, N. J. 

Few resorts in the world have stood the test of time like 
Cape May. More than a century ago parties of vacationists 
from Philadelphia journeyed to the southern end of New Jersey 
to enjoy the fine surf bathing and the good air at Cape May. 
And to-day it is still visited by thousands every year who 
appreciate its many good points. 

The stimulation which its natural progress received some 
years ago by the enlargement of its area in the creation of the 
large cottage and hotel section, reclaimed from Poverty Beach 
by the originators of New Cape May, has sounded a new note 
in its history. 

The witchery which clung to Old Cape May is as enticing as 
ever, but a new life has awakened. The same homelike quiet 
pervades the cottage life; the same social atmosphere is manifest 
in the hotels, and there is the same absence of showy display in 
dress and function, but there is an awakening to, and a new 
appreciation of, the splendid advantages of the century-old 
resort as a summer home, or an all-year visiting place. 

Hundreds of cottages have been erected in the new section 
near the splendidly equipped Hotel Cape May, which reopens 
this year for the eighth season since its completion. This 
house, which is built like a battleship, absolutely fireproof and 
complete in every appointment, is the center of the social life 
of New Cape May, whilst the older houses in the elder section 
maintain the high reputation for comfort that they have always 
borne. 

The fine ocean boulevard, sixty feet wide, extending to SeweU's 
Point, and thence around the Harbor to Washington Street, at 
Schellinger's Landing, provides a matchless drive, which at no 
point is more than one hundred feet from high tide, for a distance 
of five miles. An electric car line connects these two points with 
a loop around the Harbor bringing the house and grounds of the 
Corinthian Yacht and Country Club within easy access. Parallel 
to the drive, and extending its full length on the ocean front, is 
the new boardwalk, twenty feet in width, and just high enough 
above the waves to clear the average storm tide. This ocean 
promenade is unique in the fact that it is actually at the ocean's 
edge, and from every inch of it there is an unobstructed view 
of the mighty Atlantic. 




^ W**MPi 



ccr -iir^tr ic'Sf 'fetCi '^ " '' 

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The new land-locked harbor has a water front of five miles, 
and an average depth of thirty-five feet. It is connected with 
the ocean by a Government-built inlet, eight hundred and fifty 
feet wide and thirty feet in depth. 

This harbor is pronounced by yachtsmen as the ideal yachting 
rendezvous. It is large enough to accommodate in perfect 
safety all the pleasure craft of the Atlantic Coast, and it is said 
that a dozen warships could manoeuvre within its confines. 

The beach, hard as a race track, is a splendid highway for 
the motor car, while the new ocean boulevard and the country 
pikes furnish the driver and the motorist with a satisfying field 
for operation. 

Public pavilions are located on the ocean side of the board- 
walk. On the main pavilion a band is maintained by the city, 
giving three free concerts daily during the summer season. 

The Cape May Yacht Club, which has been attractively 
lioused for many years, is a prominent factor in the social life 
of the resort. The fine club house of the Corinthian Yacht and 
Country Club occupies a prominient place in the social life of 
New Cape May. It is unique in many features, and com- 
pares favorably with any similar institution on the Atlantic 
Coast. 

A large fleet of privately-owned yachts make Cape May one 
of the busiest small-craft ports along the New Jersey seacoast. 
A number of races and contests are held every year which 
attract yachtsmen from all parts of the East. 

Out-of-door life is the striking characteristic at Cape May. 
The surf bathing is admittedly the best and safest in America, 
while the beach is the fihest. The entire colony spend a portion 
of each day in the water and on the sands. The Golf Club 
claims the allegiance of its devotees on a green that is unequaled 
at the seashore. 

There is also an attractive amusement paviHon which provides 
the usual lines of entertainment for young and old, while a 
grand Casino and a Pavilion has been erected at Sewell's Point. 

The^ magnificent physical advantages of Cape May, its 
recognition by the National Government as the fittest point on 
the Atlantic Coast as a harbor for the refuge for all classes of 
vessels, and its complete railroad facilities make it one of the 
most important, as well as the most charining resorts on the 
Atlantic seaboard. 








BATHING HOUR AT CAPE MAY 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



I 



NORTHERN NE\\^ JERSEY 




THE BOULEVARD AT LONG BRANCH 



LONG BRANCH, N. J. 

Long Branxh, which includes the sections known as West 
End, Elberon, Hollywood, Norwood, Branchport, East Long 
Branch, North Long Branch and Pleasure Bay, stretches along 
the high bluff that forms the coast Une of Northern New Jersey, 
for a distance of about six miles, and extends inland over two 
miles. 

Like Cape May, Long Branch proper is one of the old-time 
seashore resorts, for tradition has it that parties from New 
York, New Jersey, and even Philadelphia, coached or rode thither 
to enjoy the sea bathing and eat the "original shore dinner." 

Despite the varied attractions of the newer and more garish 
resorts of the Forty Beaches, Long Branch still holds its own 
as a popular place in which to spend the heated term, in addition 
to being a city of fifteen thousand inhabitants engaged in business 
enterprises of various kinds. 

The city is situated at the head of navigation on the Shrewsbury 
River, and is the first resort of any size south of Sandy Hook. 
Right at this point the highest elevation of land on the entire 
Atlantic seaboard, according to official government surveys, is 
reached, and Long Branch is located on a high, dry, coast plateau 
overlooking the ocean. On the north, the city is, in part, 
bounded by the picturesque Shrewsbury River, and from east 
to west, a chain of lakes of rare charm intersects the municipal 
territory. The high elevation and the combination of ocean, 
river, and lakes give the place a system of perfect natural drain- 
age which make marshes, mosquitoes and malaria unknown here. 

Along the crest of the commanding bluff extends an eighty-foot 
beautiful boulevard, with only a narrow strip of green lawn 
and an occasional pavilion between it and the sea. A boardwalk 
connects Long Branch and West End. Good inland roads 
stretch back from the beach, affording excellent driving, automo- 
biling, and horseback riding. 



Among the attractions for visitors are its ten-acre ocean front 
park with casino and big convention hall, its bluff drive which 
affords the finest marine view in America, its four thousand-seat 
open-air theatre over the river and big ocean-front theatre, its 
eighteen-hole golf links, its free ocean-front band concerts given 
twice daily, its deep-sea and river fishing, its river crabbing, its 
racing and the Annual Labor- Day- Week Fair at the famous 
Elkwood Park Track, its amusement park at Pleasure Bay, 
yachting, canoeing, and boating on the Shrewsbury in summer 
and ice-yachting in winter, its one hundred miles of fine tree- 
shaded drives, its renowned clam-bake and shore dinner resorts. 
Then the Annual Horse Show, which is held the last week in 
July and which is the greatest open-air horse show in the world. 

WEST END, N. J. 

While West End, with its near neighbor on the landward 
side, Hollywood, although a portion of Long Branch, has an 
individuality which distinguishes it from the main city. Both 
West End and Hollywood are distinctively cottage settlements, 
although a number of hotels front the ocean in West End, and 
the Hollywood Hotel is one of the most noted hostelries on the 
North Coast. The fine automobile roads leading back from 
West End through Hollywood are lined with magnificent villas 
and homes. 

ELBERON, N. J. 

Elberon is a cluster of magnificent homes, surrounded by a 
wealth of superb landscape gardening. Great marble palaces 
crown the high bluff on the ocean side, while every road leading 
north, south and west is lined with houses large and small. 
\\'ealth and fashion vie during the season to make social prestige 
both in their homes and in the fine casino on the beach front. 



(For list of hotels, see pages 3(V-33. For fares, see pages 34—37.) 



I 



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attracte.l those to whom the more crowded conditions at Asbury 
Park do not appeal for a summer residence, and yet who want to be 
within a few minutes ride or walk of the varied amusements of the 
larger resort. 

The Allenhurst Club, with a magnificent club house that is available 
to its members from June 1 to about October 1, is really more 
than a club house, for many members and their friends use it in 
lieu of hotels and cottages during the entire season. 

Tlie loathing here is good, although at all of the beaches on the 
North Coast, the beach descends to the ocean level much more steeply 
th;in at Atlantic City and the southern resorts. A fine casino, the golf 
course and tennis courts of the Deal Country Club, and an open air 
swimming pool add much to the attractiveness of Allenhurst. 

NORTH ASBURY PARK, N. J. 

It is not possible to find any appreciable dividing line between 
North Asbury Park and Asbury Park proper, although the Pennsyl 



DEAL COUNTRY CLUB HOUSE 



vania Railroad maintains a 
venit'nce of those who make 



DEAL BEACH, N. J. 




As one leaves the magnificent resi- 
dential section of Elberon and West 
End, a short section of the coast and 
the adjacent inland countrj'side pre- 
sents a picture of pastoral beauty 
unadorned. The great forest trees 
approach closely to the ocean waves 
and the high sand bluffs alternately rise 
high above the narrow beach or flatten 
out into mere hummocks. 

A little over a mile south of Elberon, 
on a gently rolUng plateau overlooking 
the ocean and sloping down on the west 
and south to the placid waters of Deal 
Lake, is the resort known as Deal Beach, 
a collection of pretty homes, where 
many spend the entire summer amidst 
a happy combination of country and 
seashore. 

A curious feature of the resorts on 
the northern coast of New Jersey is the 
large number of fresh water lakes that 

lie just a few hundred yards from the ocean. The largest of these is 
Deal Lake, which so closely approaches the line of the surf that only 
a few yards separates the two, and extends for a considerably distance 
back into the countrj'. A number of pretty islets dot its placid sur- 
face. Many enjoy canoeing and picnicing here. 

Deal Beach boasts a casino with one of the largest swimming pools 
in the country. The Deal Countn,' Club is the center of social life 
at all times of the year. A fine eighteen-hole golf course attracts 
lovers of the ancient game, and during the fall a fine pack^of hounds 
invites to the chase. Tennis is also largely indulged in. 

ALLENHURST, N. J. 

Allenhurst forms a connecting link between Deal Beach and Xr.rth 
Asbur>' Park. In fact one can hardly tell where the dividing line is, so 
closely do the many beautiful homes in each place approacli each 
other on the fine avenues that extend back from the boulevard along 
the shore to the boundaries of the open country which borders Deal 
Lake on one side and Sunset Lake, in North Asbury Park, on the other. 

AUenhurst's growth has been almost phenomenal. Hundreds of 
cottages have been built and the streets have been laid out in the most 
approved modem fashion. Like Chelsea and Ventnor, Allenhurst has 



separate station for the use and con- 
their homes in the northern section of 
the resort, beyond the line of Fourth 
Avenue. 

This section of the city is largely a 
cottage settlement, although a number 
of the larger hotels are located within 
its boundaries. 

Sunset Lake, which is dotted with 
many small islands, lies within this 
portion of the city and is the scene of 
many pretty water carnivals both by 
night and day during the summer 
season, as well as a delight to the 
many who boat or canoe over its placid 
surface. 

One may reach any of the resorts 
further north of Asbury Park, or 
those lying to the south of it, by 
the railroad running through both 
Asbury Park and North Asbury Park. 
The Deal Country Club is within 
easy reach and the Allenhurst Club 
just a short distance away. Asbury 
Park and North Asbury Park are 
also joined by the Boardwalk. 




THE ALLENHURST CLUB 



(For list ot hotels, see paijes 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



10 




ASBURY PARK BOARDWALK 



ASBURY PARK, N. J. 



AsBURY Park, lying about midway between Long Branch and 
Sea Girt, and sharing the same Pennsylvania Railroad Station 
with Ocean Grove, is known as the metropolis of the North 
Coast, on account of the large number of persons who annually 
visit it and the number and variety of its amusement features. 

Located on a beach that is wider and shallower than those 
of the resorts further north, and where the ocean waves have 
not piled up such precipitous cliffs of sand in past ages, Asbury^ 
Park combines the best features of both seashore and country. 

As its name implies, it is a park on the brink of the sea. The 
woods of New Jersey and the ocean's restless surges almost 
meet across the narrow strand. One turns directly from the 
sandy beach into avenues and streets where the leafy branches 
of forest giants meet in arches across the way. _ ,j- 

And yet Asbury Park is a typical seashore resort. Upon itst 
boardwalk, eighty feet in width and three miles in length, onei 
may walk for hours, inhaling the saline breezes from the ocean'^ 
which beats upon the beach only a few yards distant. One may^ 
enjoy the exhilaration of a bath in the surges which break upon* 
the sands. One may be amused in varied ways as the fancy 
dictates. The fisherman finds plenty of opportunity for engaging 
in his favorite sport, and the sailor may toss for hours on the 
bright blue sea. And all this within sight of bright flowers, 
green grass and the monarchs of the forest which surround the 
city and invade its very thoroughfares. 

Visitors to Asbury Park are impressed at once with the delight- 
ful sense of the beauty and comfort of the private residences' 



and cottages which line its shaded avenues. It is pre-eminently a 
"home" city. In no large seashore resort on the Atlantic Coast 
does cottage life enter so largely into the social make-up as here. 

Standing upon any of the avenues, one sees upon either side 
liundreds of beautiful residences, many of them costly in con- 
struction, and all artistic in architecture. There is every 
evidence of culture and refinement, and one misses, without 
regret, the garishness which so often enters into the architecture 
of a resort town. 

There has been no sacrifice of beauty and comfort to economize 
in space. The majority of the cottages sit from fifteen to twenty 
feet back from the broad sidewalks, and all are surrounded by 
well-kept green sward. In summer time these lawns are ablaze 
with flowers. This feature of decoration is a charming adjunct 
to Asbury Park's many beauties. One may see a perfect wealth 
of bloom during the whole summer season. 

Many of the cottages are embowered in vines; roses, wisteria 
and other cUmbing vines bloom in gorgeous profusion, set off, 
like jewels, against the green sward, the green trees and the 
varied hues of shingle and stone. The city authorities have 
provided great beds of flowers at the ocean end of each avenue, 
as well as along the esplanade which skirts the beach back of the 
boardwalk. One does not soon forget the picture formed by 
this combination of color, through which gleams, in hundreds 
of vistas, the blue ocean. 

The Boardwalk at Asbury Park is the one great meeting place 
of Asbury Park, as it is at other resorts. Extending the entire 
length of the city, from North Asbury Park to the further limits 
of Ocean Grove, it is unique in that it is not entirely linedjon 




A VISTA ON DEAL LAKE 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-3.i. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



,11 




r' "'-f.fs^' 




OCEAN PATHWAY. OCEAN GROVE 



the shore side by stores and hotels, but there are wide stretches 
in which one has a view not only of the ocean but of the shore 
boulevard which stretches along the ocean front just back of the 
esplanade. 

There are no long piers stretching from the Boardwalk into 
the sea as at Atlantic City, but the Casino, where free orchestra 
concerts are given every day, and the Arcade which houses 
Arthur Pryor and his Band during the entire season, extends a 
short distance out over the breakers. There is also a short 
fishing pier in the center of the city and a number of rest pavihons 
located along the ocean side of the boardwalk. 

The bathing is remarkably good. One may enjoy a dip in 
the surf at almost every point of the beach from the lower end 
of Ocean Grove to the upper end of North Asbury Park with 
perfect safety, and thousands enjoy the exhilaration of this 
sport every year. For those who do not care for the surf bathing 
there are several pools where they may get all the tonic benefit 
of the sea water without the excitement of fighting the waves. 

Theatrical performances are also a feature of the summer 
life, engagements being played by high-class attractions which 
draw patrons not only from the hotels but from the many 
cottages. 

Fishing and crabbing.^are two forms of relaxation that appeal 
to many, and they may be indulged in during the whole summer. 
In addition to the fine fishing from the ocean pier, there is good 



angling in the lakes. If one desires, a trip may be made to the 
fishing banks at sea, on the little schooner which makes daily 
trips. Crabbing parties usually journey a few miles down the 
shore to Shark River, where the crustaceans fairly swarm. 
This trip may be made by trolley or train. 

For the athletic minded, there is much opportunity for pur- 
suing one's choice of sport. Golf, tennis, base-ball, bowling, 
and shufBeboard playing are favorites during the summer. 
Baseball enthusiasts find their Mecca in the fine athletic field 
just outside the city where numerous matches are played during 
the summer. 

No resort section in the world presents so many delights to 
the driver and automobilist as Monmouth County, in which is 
situated Asbury Park. Hundreds of miles of hard roads radiate 
in all directions, covering a country charming in natural beauty, 
enhanced by the development of money and brains, and historic 
associations. 

OCEAN GROVE, N. J. 

Just across Wesley Lake, one of the small fresh water lakes 
which dot this section, is Ocean Grove, notable as the greatest 
camp meeting in the world and sharing with Asbury Park the 
admiration of thousands who year after year come back to it 
for rest and relaxation. 




UNDER CANVAS FOR THE SUMMER. OCEAN GROVE 
(For list of hoteU, see pa^es 30-^3. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



12 



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Ocean Grove is ruled by the Ocean Grove Camp-Meeting 
Association. While some of its regulations seem strict in these 
Uberal days, the growth and prosperity of the place bear testi- 
mony to the foresight of its founders when framing and carrying 
out municipal regulations. 

During the camp-meeting days the city is crowded with 
transient visitors and religious representatives from all parts of 
the land. Many national conventions of religious, scientific, 
and educational associations are held here during the summer 
months. These have materially served to increase the reputa- 
tions of both Ocean Grove and Asbury Park as refined and 
cultured resorts. 

Asbury Park, the next-door neighbor, is joined to Ocean 
Grove on its land side by ornamental iron bridges spanning the 
intervening lake, and by the beach promenade on the sea front. 

BRADLEY BEACH, N. J. 

To the south of Ocean Grove, Fletcher Lake, extending 
almost to the beach line, forms the north boundary of a some- 
what newer resort closely affiliated with Asbury Park — Ocean 
Grove, Bradley Beach. 

A very few years ago only a smaU colony of modest cottages 
dotted the beach and the shores of the 
lake. Today there are several hundred 
homes and seven hotels to which come 
each season a large number of people 
who think there is no place on earth 
like Bradley Beach for the summer 
vacation. 

The bathing beach here is good, 
and the boating on Fletcher Lake is 
enjoyed by many visitors. It is not 
a long walk along the Boardwalk to 
the more varied delights of Asbury 
Park, while the railroad, linking all 
the resorts between Sea Girt and Long 
Branch, runs a short distance back 
from the beach. 

AVON-BY-THE-SEA, N. J. 

On the sandy headland just north 
of the inlet in which the waters of Shark 
River and the Ocean meet, several fine hotels and a colony of 



^ 



■■?S7P'5^.'iff?' 










THE DOCK ON SHARK RIVER 

cottages form the resort known as Avon-by-the-Sea, which is highly 
favored by those desiring a quiet rest- 
] ing place during the summer months. 
i The ocean front is about two thirds 

of a mile in length and the surf bathing 
is remarkably good. Sylvan Lake, 
jT^ lying to the north, and Shark River and 

'-^ Bay to the south and west afford fine 

chance for the canoeist, sailing enthu- 
siast and motor boat lover. 



BELMAR, N. J. 

Just across the Shark River from 
Avon is Belmar, one of the most popu- 
lar of the resorts on the north coast, 
although not so large as Asbury Park 
or Long Branch. Unlike most of the 
resorts further north, it is almost en- 
tirely surrounded by water, with an 
ocean frontage of a mile and a half. 
Shark River to the north and west, and Lake Como, another of 
the fresh water lakes, so prominent a feature of the country 
hereabouts, lying but a short distance to the south. 

From this point southward, the beach becomes more shelving 
and the high sand cliffs of the Long Branch end of the coast 
become mere sand dunes, or great piles of sand covered in places 
with a growth of underbrush. The bathing here is exceptionally 
good and even the most fearsome can enjoy a plunge in the 
breakers in perfect security. 

A boardwalk extends along the ocean front the entire length 
of Belmar, and numerous amusement enterprises, with a fine 
casino, afford summer visitors many of the delights of the larger 
resort cities. A seven-liundred foot pier extending into the 
ocean offers opportunities for sea fishing or a lounge in the 
brisk breezes. 

Belmar is the center for the fishing on Shark River. A well 
equipped boat-landing is on the river, where water craft of all 
kinds may be obtained for a day's fishing, crabbing or clamming 
in the shallow waters of the river and bay. From May to 
October weakfish abound, and during June sheepshead, while 
striped bass offer royal sport during the whole year. 

Good driving and motoring roads extend to aU the resorts 
on the coast and to Lakewood, back in the pines. 



A BUSY DAY IN THE SURF 



^ 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34—37.) 



13 



COMO, N. J. 

Nestled in the little stretch of land shutting out the ocean 
from the bright waters of Lake Como, is the cottage settle- 
ment of Como, where ocean, lake, sandy beach and fragrant 
pine woods make a combination that is hard to beat for 
healthf ulness. If one desires amusements, one must trolley 
to Belmar or Asbur}' Park, for Como is strictly a home place. 
The fine roads of this section are within easy reach for 
driving or the automobile, while the bathing is good. 

SPRING LAKE, N. J. 

The beautiful lake, from which Spring Lake takes its 
name, lies right in the heart of this resort. Around it 
have been built hundreds of beautiful homes, some of them 
rivalling the magnificent villas for which Elberon, Deal and 
AUenhurst are noted, and a number of fine hotels, where 
during the summer season the fashionable of New York, 
Philadelphia and other cities continue the gaieties of the 
winter, in a charming setting of ocean, lake and country. 

Like Belmar, Spring Lake enjoys a 
wide expanse of beach on which the 
restless surges of the Atlantic beat and 
invite to a plunge in their saline depths. 
Fronting this is the boardwalk, a fine 
promenade much used by the residents, 
and there is ample opportunity to 
lounge on the wide piazzas of the 
hotels, most of which face the sea. 

The spring fed waters of the lake 
abound with a variety of fish, and its 
placid surface affords the finest kind 
of boating. A casino, with all the com- 
forts and luxuries of the metropolitan 
club, and a salt water swimming pool 
for those who do not care for surf 
bathing, are centers of interest. 

Fine driving roads lead in all direc- 
tions; up and down the coast, and 
back into the country, which is here so ■ 
close that farm products fresh from the- ' 
vine and stalk are a daily luxury. 






A PART OF SPRING LAKE 



THE CAMP GROUND. SEA GIRT 

One may reach any of the resorts 
north of Sea Girt by the railroad that 
skirts Spring Lake, and during the 
summer months the encampments of the 
New Jersey National Guard on the fine 
grounds at Sea Girt, only a mile or so 
south, are a constant source of pleasure 
to visitors. 

There are many of the bungalow 
type of cottages at Spring Lake which 
form a delightful contrast to the more 
splendid and costly villas that have 
been erected by wealthy people who 
make this resort their summer home. 



SEA GIRT, N. J. 

-^_ - _j Long before the State of New Jersey 

selected the level plateau that stretches 
back from the ocean to shallow Manasquan River as a per- 
manent camping grounds for its State Militia, Sea Girt was 
known as a seaside resort. 

Years before the newer resorts further north came into 
prominence, Sea Girt was the scene of the annual New Jersey 
"wash day," when almost the entire rural population of the 
northeastern end of the state, drove or walked hither for an 
all-day frolic on the beach and a bath in the ocean waves. 

Many who came for the wash day, came back later to build 
modest cottages in which to spend the entire heated term and 
to-day there is a good sized town right on the beach front, 
with wide streets bordered with shade trees and lined with 
attractive homes and hotels. 

The beach is the finest for bathing north of Barnegat Inlet 
and the Manasquan River, only a short distance south, affords 
fine fishing and boating. Good driving roads lead back into 
the country, notably to Lakewood and Allaire. 

The Guard is in camp nearly the whole of July and August, 
different commands occupying the quarters for stated inter- 
vals. The shooting contests on the fine Rifle Range are always 
a source of interest to residents of Sea Girt as well as to mem- 
bers of the Guard and "shots" all over the country. The 
parade ground at Sea Girt is one of the finest in the country. 



(For list of hotels, see pages .^0-.^3. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



-W 



14 




I JlNT PLEASANT 



MANASQUAN, N. J. 



Just south of Sea Girt, the Manasquan River, a short tide- ' 
water stream, joins the ocean through Manasquan Inlet, the 
most northern of the many breaks in the beach line which mark 
the southern half of New Jersey's coast. 

Back some distance from the ocean on this river is the quaint 
old town of Manasquan, one of the earliest settlements in New 
Jersey and a most delightful summer home for the man or woman 
who delights in still water boating, bathing, fishing and rambles 
in the woods. 

Mansaquan has none of the earmarks of the resort town. It 
is a simple country village, or rather town, whose wide streets 
are bordered with fine old trees that meet in a green arch during 
the summer; whose hotels and cottages are "homes" rather 
than temporary resting places, and which offers in the river and 
the woods every charm of the "Natural Life." 

It is but a short ride by train or motor car from Manasquan 
to the fishing grounds of Barnegat Bay, while the fine beach at 
Sea Girt is just "around the corner," a few minutes ride by 
train. 

BRIELLE, N. J. 

Down near the mouth of the Manasquan River is Brielle, 
like Manasquan, a resort for those who love the water and the 
many delights of sailing, motor 
boating, bathing, fishing and 
crabbing. The location of the 
Manasquan Yacht Club here has 
made Brielle known far and wide 
as a center for yachts and power 
boats. 

There is bathing in the river, 
and on the beach, which is a 
short distance eastward from the 
town. The fishing in the river 
and inlet is remarkably good, 
and hard and soft shell crabs 
may be found in the shallower 
water. 

Brielle is on the automobile 
highway that extends from Long 
Branch to Cape May along the 
coast, the road leading from this 
point across the Manasquan and 
Metedeconk Rivers to the nar- 
row strip of beach below Bay 



Head and crossing again to the 
mainland over the new bridge 
between Sea Side Heights and 
Island Heights. There are also 
good roads leading back into the 
country. 

BAY HEAD, N. J. 

A MILE south of Point Pleasant 
is Bay Head, which, as its name 
implies, lies at the headwaters of 
Barnegat Bay, and is the divid- 
ing line between the mainland 
resorts of the northern half of 
the New Jersey Coast line and 
those on the low shelving island 
beaches of the southern half of 
the coast. 

Bay Head has developed very 
rapidly as a resort in the past 
few years, on account of its 
many advantages as a summer 
land by the sea, and by reason of its wonderful resources in the 
aquatic line. Great improvements have been made in building 
new and remodeling old cottages and hotels until it now ranks 
among the many pleasant resorts in this section. The bay, the 
ocean, and the Metedeconk River, all furnish fine piscatorial 
sport and magnificent sailing grounds, and the drives are numer- 
ous and picturesque. There is also splendid bathing. 



POINT PLEASANT, N. J. 

Crossing the Manasquan River, south of Brielle, a distance 
of about a mile and a half, one comes to Point Pleasant, a charm- 
ing summer resort lying along the coast on the peninsula between 
Manasquan Inlet and the Metedeconk River, at the head of 
Barnegat Bay. 

To many. Point Pleasant is the ideal summer home, for it 
combines all the delights of the ocean front resort, the river 
town and the country village; with surf and still water bathing; 
ocean and bay sailing and motor boating; deep sea and shallow 
water fishing, and drives and rambles along typical country 
highways and byways. 

Point Pleasant originated as a cottage settlement but its 
growing popularity has brought about the opening of a number 
of very fine hotels. Hundreds still prefer the freer cottage life 




A FAIR COURSE AND A GOOD BREEZE 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



■^ 



15 



& 



BEAUTIFUL BARNEGAT BAY 




OFF FOR A CRUISE 

SEA SIDE PARK, N. J. 

The long expanse of Barnegat Bay north of where it empties 
into the Atlantic Ocean in Barnegat Inlet, is separated from the 
ocean by a very narrow strip of sandy beach on which have been 
located a number of resorts that are growing in popularity 
every year. 

The wide bay to the west and the still wider ocean to the 
east insures a summer temperature that is always fresh and 
usually cool, and an entire absence of malarial conditions that 
makes this section one of the healthiest along the coast. 

The bathing beaches are ideal for surf plunges and all the 
delights of beach life, while the waters of Barnegat Bay are a 
paradise for the sailor, the fisherman and the hunter. 

Sea Side Park, lying about midway down the peninsula, is 
the largest resort in the region and has developed rapidly during 
the past ten years, owing to its proximity to Philadelphia, 
which brings it within commuting distance of that city. Many 
business men establish their families there for the whole summer. 

The social life of the community, which is largely a cottage 
one, centers about the Yacht Club, which has a handsome and 
well-appointed club house. Frequent regattas and entertain- 
ments are held throughout the 
season under the Club's auspices. 

For those who have no yachts, 
a notable fleet of sailing boats and 
motor boats, which makes its 
headquarters at Barnegat Pier, 
in the center of the long rail- 
road bridge that spans the bay 
at this point, and those available 
at the wharf at Sea Side Park, 
make fishing and sailing on the 
broad expanse of the bay a pleasure 
that is denied no one. 

Two finely equipped passenger 
boats make hourly trips during the 
season between Sea Side Park and 
Toms River, a trip of fourteen miles 
across the bay and up Toms River 
which is a most enjoyable outing. 
The boat harbor at Sea Side Park 
is considered one of the finest along 



the coast and has accommoda- 
tions for a large number of craft. 
Motor cars can reach Sea Side 
Park by way of Toms River, 
Island Heights and the new 
bridge across the bay between 
the latter place and Sea Side 
Heights, a short distance up the 
coast. 

BERKELEY, N. J. 

The northern end of Sea Side 
Park, which at one time was the 
location of the famed Berkeley 
Anns, destroyed by fire some 
years ago, has been developed 
of late years into a cottage set- 
tlement that bids fair to rival 
a number of the other resorts 
along the coast. 



SEA SIDE HEIGHTS, N. J. 

Still further north is Sea Side Heights, which but a year or 
so ago, consisted of two or three small houses, but which to-day 
has sprung into a good sized community. It shares with Sea 
Side Park the fine bathing beach and the splendid sailing oppor- 
tunities on the bay. The completion of the new bridge across 
the bay from here to Island Heights makes Sea Side Heights a 
popular stopping point in the ride from North to South Jersey. 

ORTLEY, LAVALLETTE AND CHADWICK, N. J. 

These three resorts lie some miles up the beach from Sea 
Side Park and share with it fine bathing and all the water sports 
of the Barnegat Bay region. 

MANTOLOKING, N. J. 

The Summer colony at Mantoloking is an old established one 
which centers around the activities of the Mantoloking Yacht 
Club which holds noted summer races on the fine sailing course 
of the Bay. 




THE SOUNDING SEA 



^- 



For list of hotels, see pages 30-:i3. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



16 



THE LONG BEACH SECTION. 

South of Barnegat Inlet, the island that divides the Ocean 
from Barnegat, Manahawken and Little Egg Harbor Bays is 
somewhat wider than that north of the inlet, wliilst the main- 
land approaches nearer. Yet the climatic conditions are much 
the same, and the absence of malarial conditions and the dry- 
ness of the air, has made the resorts between Barnegat City 
and Beach Haven, on what is known as Long Beach, a haven 
for sufferers from hay fever and catarrhal troubles. 

BARNEGAT CITY, N. J. 

On the extreme northern end of the island, right where the 
waters of the bay pour into the Atlantic through the inlet, is 
a quaint old fishing village known as Barnegat City, in the 
midst of which stands old Barnegat Light, whose far reaching 
beam has saved many a good ship from foundering on the shoals 
lying just off the coast at this point. 

Situated right in the heart of the fishing kingdom of the 
Barnegat region, with almost every male resident a fisherman, 
Barnegat City is the headquarters for anglers whose one delight 
is in fishing for the catch they can get. All around the gamy 
blue fish disports himself amidst sheepshead, sea bass and other 
finny tribes and here one may be assured of many a day's sport. 

CLUB HOUSE, N. J. 

Two miles south, near Lovelady Island, a noted fishing and 
shooting point, is Club House, which is exclusively a resort for 
fishermen and gunners who enjoy a fine bathing beach in addition 
to the other attractions. 

HIGH POINT, N. J. 

Just about where Barnegat and Manahawken Bays join is 
High Point, noted not only as a fishing and gunning point, but 
as a resort where hay fever is unknown and hence sought by 
sufferers from that dread ailment during the summer months. 
There is an excellent beach at this point, which as its name 
indicates, is slightly higher in elevation that other resorts on 
Long Beach. 

SURF CITY, N. J. 

Nearly midway of the island is Surf City, another small 
colony of cottages with a good hotel where good fishing and 
gunning may be had in season and ideal conditions for sufferers 
from hay fever. 

HARVEY CEDARS, N. J. 

Years before Harvey Cedars became noted as a summer 
resort, a number of ardent sportsmen used to foregather here 
for the excellent sailing, bath- 
ing, fishing and gunning to be 
enjoyed on ocean and bay. 
To-day one does not have to 
be a clubman to enjoy the fish- 
ing, for a good flotilla of all 
sorts of craft are here to carry 
the angler either to the haunts 
of the bay fish or out to the 
fishing banks at sea. 

BRANT BEACH, N. J. 

About three miles south of 
where the railroad crosses 
Manahawken Bay to reach 
Long Island, is Brant Beach, 
an old established resort for 
hay fever sufferers. Largely a 
cottage settlement, its summer 
visitors enjoy the good bathing 
beach and the fine sailing on 
the bay. 



PEAHALA, N. J. 

South of Brant Beach is Peahala, which occupies a portion 
of the level beach section between the ocean and Little Egg 
Harbor Bay and affords summer visitors a cottage settlernent, 
with a good bathing beach and ample opportunity for sailing 
and motor boating. 

BEACH HAVEN TERRACE, N. J. 

Developed within the past five years as a cottage settlement. 
Beach Haven Terrace is rapidly forging to the front as a pro- 
gressive seashore resort, embodying the latest improvements in 
the arrangement of streets and avenues and the character of 
homes being erected there. 

SPRAY BEACH, N. J. 

Just a short distance below Beach Haven Terrace is Spray 
Beach, a somewhat older, but none the less attractive resort 
which offers a wide expanse of strand and all the pleasures of 
sailing and boating on the bay. 

NORTH BEACH HAVEN, N. J. 

North Beach Haven occupies the same position to Beach 
Haven that Chelsea does to Atlantic City. It has been developed 
largely as a cottage settlement appealing to the business man 
who desires to locate his family in a comfortable and safe summer 
home which he can reach every day from his place of business. 

BEACH HAVEN, N. J. 

Beach Haven occupies an ideal location for a seaside resort. 
With seven miles of Little Egg Harbor Bay on one side and the 
Atlantic on the other, it has the advantages of temperature and 
cooUng breezes that an island should have. The absence of 
vegetation and its distance from the mainland makes Beach 
Haven a resort for sufferers from hay fever, and many find 
immediate relief in its delightful atmosphere. 

Boating and yachting are among the principal pastimes and 
recreations, and the fishing is unexcelled. Every facility is 
afforded for the full enjoyment of these healthful sports. The 
Bay affords a yachting course excelled by no other in the country, 
and ambitious yachtsmen may sail to Cape May through the 
bays and inlets which form an inside channel back of the various 
South Jersey resorts or up Barnegat Bay to its head waters at 
Bav Head. 

While there is an absence of the more garish amusement fea- 
tures of the larger seashore resorts, Beach Haven offers the summer 
visitor unequalled opportunities for recreation and pleasure. 




ON THE strand AT BEACH HAVEN 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



17 



-® 



ISLAND HEIGHTS, N. J. 

Those in search of a summer home near the water, where the 
saiHng and fishing is fine, and who do not care for the pleasures 
of the resort on the ocean front, or the garish amusements of 
the larger seaside cities, will find a number of resorts located 
on the mainland side of Barnegat Bay that afford delightful 
spots in which to spend the vacation, whether it be for a day, a 
week, a month, or the whole summer. 

Island Heights rises direct from the waters of Toms River at its 
intersection with Barnegat Bay, the bluffs above the waters' edge 
ranging from ten to sixty feet in height. Three miles away, across 
the bay and the narrow strip of beach on which is located Sea- 
side Park, is the broad Atlantic Ocean. This gives Island 
Heights all the advantages of an ocean front resort, with the 
additional pleasures of magnificent boating and Stillwater bathing 
together with the finest fishing and hunting in season. 

Toms River, a placid flowing stream, affords fine bathing 
for those who fear the rougher water, whilst Barnegat Bay 
Ues waiting for the sailor or the motor-boat man. There is 
excellent opportunity for driving and motoring, ample stable 
room and garage accommodations being available. A golf 
course nearby attracts lovers of the royal game. The sea air, 
passing over the broad expanse of Barnegat Bay, reaches the 
resort laden with all its coolness and invigorating freshness. 

PINE BEACH, N. J. 

On the opposite side of Toms River, where it empties into the 
bay, is a newer but none the less delightful resort known as Pine 
Beach which has been largely developed within the past four or 
five years. Occupying a wooded headland, overlooking the three 
miles of bay stretching out toward Seaside Park, those who settle 
at Pine Beach for the summer season will be assured of cool breezes 
practically all the time, which combine the sahne qualities of the 
ocean water with the piney fragrance of the woods. 

OCEAN GATE, N. J. 

Nearer the bay on the same side of Toms River as Pine 
Beach is another comparatively new settlement known as 
Ocean Gate, which has had a rapid growth in the past few years. 
A large number of bungalows and cottages have been erected 





TUCKERTON CREEK 



ISLAND HEIGHTS YACHT CLUB 

here in the midst of the pine woods, fronting on the wide expanse 
of bay, where one may have the full benefit of all the delights of 
country and seashore combined. 

TOMS RIVER, N. J. 

A LITTLE over three miles back from the bay is the old town of 
Toms River, which takes its name from the placid stream that runs 
through it and past Island Heights, Ocean Gate and Pine Beach. 

Toms River proves a delightful summer resting place for the 
man or woman who does not care for the excitement and gaiety 
of the larger seashore places and yet who desires to get the full 
benefit of saline breezes and good boating and sailing. It is 
but a short sail from Toms River out on to the broad waters 
of Barnegat Bay and less than a half hour ride by train to the 
fine bathing beach at Sea Side Park. 

TUCKERTON, N. J. 

This town of about two thousand inhabitants is located on 
the shores of Tuckerton Bay at the head of Tuckerton Creek, 
and directly opposite Beach Haven. Between these two points 
are found the finest sailing and best fishing grounds along the 
New Jersey coast. The surrounding country is pretty, as well 
as the town itself, Lake Pohatcong, located right in the center 
of the town, being a charming sheet of water affording ample 
opportunity for rowing. 

The town itself is well worth a visit. In it are the homes, 
many of them very old, of the fishermen who have pursued their 
livelihood on the Bay for many years. Marvelous tales of great 
catches are told on doorstep and at the postofEce during off 
hours, and the tellers never want an audience. 

At the same time, Tuckerton is an up-to-date town with a 
number of fine residences and business places. During the past 
year the eight hundred and twenty foot high aerial of the Tucker- 
ton Radio Station erected in the town has brought Germany 
within speaking distance of the United States, and fame to 
i he little town as well. 

OTHER FISHING RESORTS. 

In the immediate neighborhood of Tuckerton are the towns of 
Barnegat, Manahawken, West Creek and Waretown where fisher- 
men throng during the season for the fine sport in the six mile 
wide bay stretching out to the east. 



^- 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



18 



-W 



DELAWARE, MARYLAND AND VIRGINIA 



i 




THE MORNING DIP 



The coast line of the Atlantic seaboard lying between Delaware 
Bay and Chesapeake Bay is very similar in character to that 
along the southern half of New Jersey. The shore is fringed 
with gentle shelving beaches upon which the breakers tumble in 
such gentle cadence that surf bathing is at once perfectly safe 
for even the most timid and exhilarating in the highest degree. 
Several resorts have been developed along this stretch of beach 
which have for some years been very popular. 



REHOBOTH, DEL. 

Just across the mouth of the Delaware from Cape May, 
south of where the light on Cape Henlopen marks the Delaware 
side of the entrance to Philadelphia's harbor is the Newport 
of the Diamond State, Rehoboth, which for many years has 
been a favorite summering place with residents of Wilming- 
ton and other cities and towns in the Delaware peninsula. 

The many improvements 
which have been made in re- 
cent years to the beach front, 
the boardwalk or esplanade 
and the hotels and cottages, 
have attracted to it many from 
other cities in the eastern half 
of the country. Direct train 
service in connection with a 
short steamer ride from Balti- 
more has made it particularly 
appealing to residents of that 
city and points further south. 

The beach at Rehoboth is 
as fine for bathing as that at 
Cape May, and numerous fresh 
water lakes lying back of the 
shore line in the immediate 
neighborhood afford safe still 
water boating and fishing. A 
$15,000 casino or club house 
and a newly-constructed board- 
walk are among the many 
attractions of the place. 



OCEAN CITY, MD. 

SiNEPUXENT Beach, upon 
which is situated Ocean City, 
constitutes Maryland's coast 
line, and has long been far- 
famed to the sportsman and 
health-seeker. It abounds in 
wild fowl and shore birds and 
all kinds of fish. The sandy 
beach, with a solid foundation 
of clay, bounded on the west 
for forty miles by a bay from 
one to eight feet deep, affords 
fine gunning, fishing, and sail- 
ing. Crabs, striped bass, blue- 
fish, perch, and rockfish are 
caught in great numbers from 
the bridge connecting Ocean 
City with the mainland and 
from the ocean pier recently 
erected. The surf being free from currents and dangerous 
undertow, accidents from drowning rarely occur. It is the 
nearest point to the Gulf Stream except Cape Hatteras. 

But it is not alone as a haunt for the fisherman or hunter that 
Ocean City is famed. For to it come every year men of affairs 
who settle their families here for the whole summer, and the 
short vacationist of a day or a week, who comes thither to enjoy 
the fine bathing beach and the many attractions which the 
resort offers for pleasure. 

The bathing is fine, the beach being similar in character to 
those on the southern half of New Jersey and there are no 
treacherous holes to look out for, so that the youngest child and 
the oldest man or woman may bathe in perfect secunty. 

Sinepuxent Bay, on the west of the resort, is much like 
Barnegat Bay — a perfect course for sailing or motor boating and 
full of gamy fish awaiting the skill of the angler. Crabs may be 
snared in the shallower reaches of this bay. 

A well kept and well lighted boardwalk fronts the resort for 




WHERE THE DUCKS FLY THICK 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



19 








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OLD POINT COMFORT, VA. 

Located on a point of land washed on the one hand by the 
waters of Chesapeake Bay and on the other by Hampton Roads, 
this always deUghtful coast resort of the Old Dominion is cele- 
brated not only for its natural advantages of cUmate and location, 
but for its great hotels and the social life which attracts so 
many eminent representatives of all classes. 

Surrounded by points of historic interest, Old Point Comfort 
possesses attractions wliich one can hardly appreciate until he 
visits it. At Jamestown, early in the seventeenth century, a 
little band of English colonists came to these shores and settled. 
At Yorktown, the turning point in the great war against English 
tyranny and oppression was reached, while at Williamsburg, 
the pohcy of the Colonies 
was framed. In the late 
war between the States, 
the peninsula on which 
Old Point Comfort is 
situated was made mem- 
orable through the great 
peninsula campaign. 

The waters of Hamp- 
ton Roads need no in- 
troduction, for to all is 
known the story of that 
greatest of naval duels 
between the "Monitor" 
and the "Merrimac." 

Chief of the many at- 
tractions of the place is 
Fortress Monroe, Amer- 
ica's most powerful 
stronghold. 

To those in search of Sr'^'" 
health, Old Point Com- Sf^"" 
fort offers all the essen- 
tials of the European 
"Cure." A fine supply ^^ 
of alkaline, saline, water 
is furnished to Hotel 
Chamberlin guests, who 
take it under physicians' 
care, together with a 
full system of Thera- 
peutic Baths, carefully 
selected diet, inspected ►;; 
by Government experts, !*" ,: 
and a regular course of 
outdoor exercise. - _~a»tr- 

Like all first-class, up- 
to-date resorts, Old Point - 
Comfort has an excellent 
golf course and club- 
house. The Hampton 
Roads Golf and Country 
Club, with links overlooking 
become an important factor in 
known resort. 

There is no particular " Season" at Old Point Comfort. For 
any month and all the months are seasonable — each one has its 
own particular appeal and charm for the seeker after rest, health 
and recreation. In the glowing months of Summer, the kindly 
Gulf Stream tempers the heat, and cooling breezes sweep in from 
the sea, across verandas and into opened casements. 

Spring and Autumn there is a snappiness to the air that brings 
roses to the cheeks and sends the good red blood coursing like a 
racer to every part of the body. Outdoors is a delight from sun 
up to sun down, and the cool night invites to restful sleep. 




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VIRGINIA BEACH (TOP) OLD POINT COMFORT 

CROSSING CHESAPEAKE BAY (BOTTOM) 



the famous roadstead, has 
the attractions of this well- 



Winter's keen edge is softened by that same Gulf Stream that 
l'joIs summer days, and the smell of the pines makes Ufe worth 
living. Come when you will. Old Point Comfort is enjoyable. 
Whether for health or pleasure; whether for rest from social 
activities or a renewal of them under new conditions, this haven 
welcomes all comers with open arms and opportunities not 
approached by any other resort in the world. 

OCEAN VIEW, VA. 

Ocean View is situated on Chesapeake Bay, eight miles from 
Norfolk, Va., a ride of twenty minutes on electric cars, which 
run from Norfolk every few minutes during the summer season. 

It is also easily reached 
by ferry steamer from 
Old Point Comfort, 
being almost directly 
opposite that resort, five 
miles across Hampton 
Roads. 

Ocean View has a 
magnificent white sandy 
beach, lined with hotels, 
private cottages and 
boarding houses; is sup- 
plied with the latest up- 
to-date amusements and 
recreation devices which 
make it the most popular 
resort of its kind in the 
entire South. 

The boating and bath- 
ing facilities are unsur- 
passed and the fishing 
throughout the summer 
the finest and best to be 
found on the Atlantic 
Coast south of Georges 
Bank. 



VIRGINIA BEACH, VA. 

This resort, situated 
directly on the Atlantic 
Ocean, eighteen miles 
east of Norfolk and six 
miles south of Cape 
Henry, has many excel- 
lent points of attraction. 
Its fine, sloping beach, 
amply provided with 
(CENTER) bathing facilities, makes 

it one of the finest bath- 
ing resorts on the At- 
lantic coast, having the advantage of an equable climate, due 
to the close proximity of the Gulf Stream. Stretching back 
from the beach for five miles is a beautiful pine forest, through 
which excellent roads and delightful bridle paths have been 
cut. 

A fine casino, with dining rooms and grills as well as numerous 
amusement features, daily orchestra concerts and well appointed 
bath houses, adds greatly to the popularity of Virginia Beach, 
not only as a pleasant place in which to spend a vacation, but 
as an excursion point from Norfolk and Old Point Comfort. 

A convenient electric line leading out of the heart of Norfolk 
brings both Virginia Beach and Ocean View within easy reach of 
tourists to that point. 





(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



22 



PICTURESQUE LONG ISLAND 



No other section of the country equals the variety of diversions 
offered by Long Island, with its white sandy beaches, beautiful 
bays, hills, valleys, streams and lakes — a natural paradise. 
One hundred and twenty-three miles long, fifteen to twenty-five 
miles wide, and with over four hundred miles of salt water 
shore line, it is the largest island on the east coast of the United 
States. Its cUmate is ideal. The prevaihng summer winds 
are from the south, which sweep from the ocean over Long 
Island, making blankets a necessity during the sleeping hours. 
The island is at least ten degrees cooler than any other locality 
on the nearby coast — an important consideration to the summer 
sojourner when the mercury in the thermometer cHmbs its little 
ladder to the 100-degree rung within the city's confines. 

Long Island has received a tremendous impetus both in 
permanent settlement and casual outing since it has become 
directly and intimately connected with the heart of New York 
by the splendid electric service between Pennsylvania Sta- 
tion and its many towns. 

THE SOUTH SHORE. 

Those who desire to spend their summer by the seaside must 
go to the resorts on the South Shore, washed by the Atlantic 
Ocean. Some of the most famous watering places in the country 
are to be found in this section. Beginning with Manhattan 
Beach, and continuing to the end of the island, to Montauk 
Point, there are over forty villages and summer settlements 
where accommodations may be had by summer visitors. 

Manhattan Beach and Rockaway Beach are resorts so closely 
allied with life in New York City that a description is unnecessary. 
With many villages and towns extending from the confines of 
Brooklyn to Jamaica, they form a suburban section at once 
convenient and attractive. Even beyond Jamaica there are 
settlements like Far Rockaway, Edgemere, and Arverne, which, 
while strictly seashore resorts, are inhabited the whole year 
round by those who like the freedom of cottage life. 

Beyond these places one comes to the real summer places of 
which the nearest to New York is Long Beach, located on a 
spit of land separating Hempstead Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. 
There are many pleasant villages along the railroad east of Long 
Beach, such as Freeport and Massapequa. They are quiet 
places, with permanent populations, good society, fine driving, 





WHERE BAY MEETS HEADLAND 



COLD SPRING HARBOR 

and within easy reach of beach and water. Amityville, close by, 
shares with Massapequa its charming surroundings. 

Farther east one finds Babylon (Oak Island, Muncie Island — 
reached from Babylon), Bayshore (Point-0' Woods, Ocean 
Beach and Saltaire — reached from Bay Shore), Islip, Oakdale, 
Sayville, and Blue Point, directly on the Great South Bay, the 
finest fishing ground in America — a veritable sportsmen's 
paradise. These villages are the summering places of some of 
the best families in the land, and while termed fashionable, 
offer accommodations for all classes. 

The largest village on the South Shore is Patchogue, the 
rendezvous for the fishing smacks and catboats on the Great 
South Bay. Beyond Patchogue are some of the finest resorts 
on the island. Among the number are Bellport, Centre Moriches, 
East Moriches, all charming places; Quogue, a particularly 
attractive spot; Good Ground, with Shinnecock Hills golf 
course near by, and the famous group of towns known as the 
Hamptons. 

Westhampton is a charming town with beautiful surroundings. 
Southampton is settled largely in summer by wealthy New 
Yorkers. Bridgehampton is another popular summering place, 
while Easthampton is the Mecca of an artistic colony. 

Water Mill is another village near by which is growing in 
size and popularity, while Sag Harbor, formerly the home of 
the Atlantic whalers, is one of the quaint old towns on Long 
Island. Out on the point beyond the Hamptons is Amagansett, 
which also has its charms for the summer resident. 

NORTH SHORE. 

The North Shore of Long Island is bold and precipitous. 
The Sound makes many indentations of bays, and on either 
side of these the land is high and wooded with the finest growth 
of timber. Boating, bathing, and fishing may be enjoyed along 
the entire North Shore; added to these pleasures are the beauty 
of the scenery, unrivaled drives, and cool and invigorating air. 

Of the resorts near New York, Port Washington, Glen Head, 
Sea CUff, Glen Cove, and Oyster Bay are the most prominent. 
Huntington is known to fame as the "Riviera of America." It 
does not belie its nickname. In the placid waters of Huntington 
Bay was held the International Motor Boat Race for the Harms- 
worth Cup. On the same bay is located the Huntington Lodge, 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33, For fares, see pages 34—37.) 



23 





A LONG ISLAND SOUND REACH 



popular with yaclitsmen and motorists. Northport and Port 
Jefferson lie farther to the east. Sea Cliff, once renowned as a 
camp-meeting site, commands a beautiful view of the Sound, 
with the shores of Connecticut in the distance. It stands on 
the bluffs of Hempstead Harbor, and is noted for the fine boating 
and still-water bathing. Oyster Bay is charming. It is a 
rendezvous for yachtsmen, and its golf links are attractively 
laid out and very popular. 

Huntington and Port Jefferson, two of the older towns of 
Long Island, are both deservedly popular resorts, both on 
account of the scenic surroundings and of the fine fishing and 
hunting to be enjoyed near by. 

From Port Jefferson the railroad passes through the attractive 
rural villages of Millers Place, Rocky Point, and Shoreham to 
Wading River, the terminus of this branch of the railroad. At 
Shoreham a large cottage settlement is located and is growing 
rapidly. 

THE CENTRAL SECTION. 

This section is rich in natural scenery, and, because of its 
peculiar situation, with soil perfect for drainage, the hills to 
the north offering shelter from harsh winds, and the pine trees, 
with their health-giving balsamic odors, it is a region unsur- 
passed for salubrity. 



Garden City has always been a favorite resort. Located in a 
beautiful park of thirty acres, is the Garden City Hotel, ranking 
as one of the most superbly appointed hostelries in the East. 
One of the largest villages is Riverhead. From this point on 
to Greenport, the end of the railroad, are several charming 
places located on beautiful Peconic Bay, the more prominent 
being Jamesport, Mattituck, and Southold. The boating on 
Peconic Bay is considered by many superior to that on the 
Great South Bay. The fishing is excellent and the bathing 
beaches so shallow that children may bathe in the greatest safety. 

Peconic Bay, with its wooded shores and gentle hills, is more 
like a Maine lake than a body of salt water, and forms one of 
the most distinctive of all Long Island's aquatic features. 

Few watering places are better known than Shelter Island. 
It is six miles long and four miles wide. The tem.perature here 
is delightfully cool, as the island is swept by breezes from over 
the waters of the bays, which wash its shores. The island is 
unique in many respects, not only in its location, but in its 
character. It consists of nine thousand acres of high rolling 
upland, diversified by hill and vale, clothed with luxuriant 
vegetation and fine forests. Imposing wooded headlands jut 
out upon the bays, with precipitous bluffs and smooth beaches; 
it has innumerable bays and inlets, presenting one of the most 
varied and charming panoramic views imaginable. Boating 
and bathing facilities are unexcelled at Shelter Island. 




THE CLIFFS AT SHELTER ISLAND 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



24 



ALLEGHENY AND BLUE MOUNTAINS 




That portion of the great Appalachian Range, which bisects 
the States of Pennsylvania and Maryland as the Allegheny 
Mountains and the Blue Ridge, differs from most of the other 
sections in that the tops of the ridges are rounded and flat, 
with no sharply defined peaks like those in the White Mountains 
of New Hampshire or the Adirondacks of New York. 

BEDFORD, PA. 

Of these resort towns, Bedford Springs is perhaps the best 
known. Lying on the Raystown Branch of the Blue Juniata, on 
the slope of Evitt's Mountain, at an elevation of eleven hundred 
feet, this old town is renowned for its famous mineral springs. 

The wonderful cura- 
tive powers of Bedford 
Springs have been de- 
clared by expert chemists 
and specialists to be un- 
equaled the world over. 
The waters are especially 
efficacious in building up 
a system run down by 
overwork or worry, in 
the cure of dyspepsia, 
hepatic affections, for 
diseases of the stomach 
and intestines, rheuma- 
tism, kidney diseases, 
gout, Bright's 
disease, and Bedford 
countless other springs 
iUs. These 
wonderful waters, in con- 
junction with the fresh, 
pure mountain air of this 
locality, are natural ton- 
ics and act as restorers 
of health and energy. 

Almost every form of 
out-of-door exercise may 
be indulged in. A swim- 
ming pool and golf links 
have recently been added 
to the attractions at this 
resort. Butthebeautiful 
walks and picturesque 
rambles are among the 
most seductive 
of the attrac- *\J^l 
tions, and offer QH£fj|£s 
rare opportun- 
ities for enjoyable walk- 
ing and horseback riding. 
The summer temperature averages from seventy to seventy-five 
degrees. 

EBENSBURG, PA. 

Almost on the highest summits of the Allegheny range, at 
an altitude of twenty-one hundred feet above sea level, is the 
quaint old town of Ebensburg which for many years has been 
the summer home of many who desired to seek the exhilaration 
that the higher elevations give, particularly during the months 
when the temperature in the cities is far from comfortable. 

While the characteristics of the city are largely those of the 
thrifty Welsh people who early in the history of the State of 



> 




Pennsylvania settled on this high plateau, modem thrift and 
industry has stimulated the growth of Ebensburg from a mere 
country village to a well maintained city of about two thousand 
population, with paved streets and fine business places and 
homes. 

Yet Ebensburg, despite its commercial character, is a most 
charming and most healthful place and offers much to attract 
the visitor. Fine driving and motor car roads lead in all direc- 
tions through the mountains and valleys. 

MT. GRETNA, PA. 

Located high on a spur of the South Mountain range of the 

Blue Ridge, Mt. Gretna 
offers over five thousand 
acres of open park, com- 
prising a large fresh- 
water lake, picturesque 
valley land and wooded 
hills, with Governor 
Dick, the highest point 
in the park, whose sum- 
mit is one thousand one 
hundred and fifty-four 
feet above sea level, com- 
manding a view of two 
thousand square miles, 
presents a wonderful pic- 
ture of primi- 
BLUE '"'^^ ^'^^ culti- 
RIDGE '^^ted scenic 
beauty. Many 
come hither on account 
of the altitude and the 
many summer diversions 
available ; others seek 
Mount Gretna because 
it is the "forest prim- 
eval" brought close to 
home and rendered 
doubly attractive by the 
careful hand of man. 

Efforts have been 
directed to the creation 
of a beautiful, healthful, 
and in every way de- 
lightful forest commu- 
nity; an ideal 
MT. place for chil- 

GRETNA dren, hence a 
unique family 
resort, which it aims to 
be. It has a summer 
population of about 3500, constantly increasing, housed in 
upwards of 450 privately owned cottages and the several hotels, 
and with its several thousands of acres of woodland and clear- 
ings, there is practically no limit to its expansion. 

The resort is supplied with electric lights and the sanitary 
arrangements are protected through the medium of a sewer 
system and a sewage disposal plant of the most modern type. 

The annual encampment of a portion of the National Guard of 
the State of Pennsylvania here; the sessions of the Pennsylvania 
Chautauqua, with its summer schools attended by hundreds 
every year, and the camp grotmds of the United Brethren 
Church, add to Mt. Gretna's attractions. 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



25 



— ^ 



& 



CHAUTAUQUA LAKE 




-s>iiSS>0SXMtt^ 



^ 



CHAUTAUQUA. N. Y.. AND THE LAKE 



Clustered about Chautauqua Lake, a lovely sheet of water 
in southwestern New York, fourteen hundred feet above sea 
level, are a number of beautifully situated summer resorts. 
The lake, which is nearly twenty miles in length and varying 
in width from one and a half miles to half a mile, is but seven 
miles from Lake Erie, although seven hundred feet above its level. 

Chautauqua, the home of the world-renowned Chautauqua 
Institution, is located three miles from Mayville, the most 
important town in the vicinity, on the southwestern shore of 
the lake. Cottage life predominates here, although there are 
also hotel accommodations for those who do not care for the 
easy cottage life. Constant amusement of a quiet but enjoyable 
character is provided. Renowned speakers in all branches of 
art and literature are in attendance all summer, while concerts 
and dramatic performances occur frequently. 

Bathing in the lake, and canoeing and sailing on its broad 
surface are two delights into which all Chautauquans enter 
vigorously. These sports, as well as those of the gymnasium 
and athletic field, are under proper restrictions, which ensure 
a right usage of their privileges. 

Point Chautauqua, on the opposite shore of the lake, is also 
noted as a cottage resort, many well-known families having 
beautiful summer homes erected on the heavily wooded pro- 
montory from which the place gets its name. 

Bemus Point, lying on the north side of the lake about midway 
of its length, is one of the largest resorts, and next to Chautauqua, 



probably the best known. To its several hotels come year 
after year the same families to enjoy the delights of the lake 
life, both shore and land pleasures and to recreate in its delightful 
surroundings. 

At Lakewood one will find much the same life as at Bemus 
and Point Chautauqua, except that the houses are the property 
of a wealthier class than frequent the other resorts. Golf links 
vie with motor boating and yachting in providing amusement 
for the residents. Greenhurst is a beautiful cottage settlement 
much in favor with those who visit Chautauqua year after year. 
Celoron was created almost solely for a one-day pleasure resort. 
Jamestown is a prosperous city, an important railroad center, 
as well as one of the entrance ports for the Chautauqua region. 

Fishing on Lake Chautauqua is one of its exceptional features, 
inasmuch as, owing largely to the efforts of the State Fisheries 
Commission and the protection of the game laws, the sport 
seems to be growing better and better every year. The Chau- 
tauqua Lake muskallonge, in particular, has a reputation 
shared by only a few of its kind, not only as a game fish, but 
as an edible one. Most of the captures are made between the 
20th of August and December 1st. Till about October 1st the 
troUing-spoon bait gives the best results. Early in October this 
fish becomes partial to live bait, the best bait being chub or 
shiners, five or six inches long. The open season for small- 
mouthed bass, with which the lake abounds, begins June 16th 
and lasts to December 1st. 




COTTAGES ON THE LAKE 
(For list of hotels, see pages 30-3J. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



26 



® 



Delaware Valley and Pogono Mountains 



THE VALLEY OF THE DELAWARE RIVER. 

The Delaware River, rising on the west slopes of the Catskill Mountains in 
New York, flows through the hills and valleys of New York and forms for 
its entire length the boundary line between the States of Pennsylvania and 
New Jersey and Delaware and New Jersey. 

Of the three hundred miles of river from source to mouth in Delaware Bay, 
more than one hundred miles offers to the summer vacationist beauty spots in 
which to locate in comfortable hotels or bungalows, or pitch a tent beside its 
placid waters. 

Between Port Jervis, which lies where New York, New Jersey and Pennsyl- 
vania come together, and the Delaware Water Gap, where the river breaks 
through the Blue Mountain, there are a number of old established resorts, 
which are visited year after year by those to whom the beauty of the river 
and the simplicity of the social Hfe at 
the hotels and boarding houses appeal. 

South of the Delaware Water Gap 
between Manunka Chunk and Trenton 
both banks of the river are occupied 
at many places by camping parties, 
drawn thither by the many attractions 
of river and country. In addition, 
there are a number -of places where 
typical country hotels offer delightful 
accommodations to the summer visitor. 

A special folder of camping sites 
may be obtained of ticket agents. 



THE PARADISE FOR CAMPERS. 

The eighty-three miles of Delaware 
Valley between Trenton and the Dela- 
ware Water Gap is one of the most 
diversified sections of river country in 
the eastern half of the American 
continent. 

Its surface is not always placid, 
though, for even in this section there 
are a number of the famed "riffles" 
which tempt the skiU of the canoeist 





ALONG THE CANAL 




WHERE THE HILLS CREEP CLOSE 



and make this sport one much enjoyed 
by the summer visitors. 

North of Stockton the islands in 
the river become more numerous and 
the hills rise to higher altitudes and 
crowd in closer to the edge of the river. 
Near Stockton a group of well known 
artists have established a summer 
colony on account of the beauty of 
the river near this point. 

The famed Palisades of the Delaware 
begin a mile or so north of Milford, 
and from this point on to the Water 
Gap the hills rise in gradually higher 
ranges through which the river finds a 
winding path. 

North of Belvidere, the river scenery 
becomes wilder and hundreds of camp- 
ers flock thither year after year to get 
close to nature, away from the noise 
and confusion of the city or town life. 
Here, as in the lower reaches of the 
river, many islands afford secluded loca- 
tions for tent colonies. 
The river affords good fishing during the season and campers, and those who 
prefer the less strenuous life of the hotel, should take their fishing tackle with 
them. 

Boating, and particularly canoeing, is a delight on the Delaware, and during 
the greater part of the distance between Port Jervis and Trenton perfectly 
safe. The riffles (places where the river breaks into slight rapids over stone 
ledges extending diagonally across the current) lend excitement to the man or 
woman who prefers the instable canoe to the steadier row boat. 

Bathing is possible at almost every point along the river and tennis may 
be enjoyed at most of the towns. Driving and automobile highways lead in 
many directions from the river back into the country and along the bank 
of the stream, and from Easton (reached through Philipsburg station) one 
may take delightful electric car trips up the Lehigh and into the slate 
regions lying south of the Pocono Ridge. 

J (For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



UNDER ARCHING TREES 



27 



DELAWARE WATER GAP, PA, 

The Delaware Water Gap has grown in favor with those who 
prefer the quiet of the mountains to the excitement of the seashore 
year by year, until to-day it stands among the most prominent 
of the inland resorts. Thousands visit it every year, its charms 
becoming more endearing with every successive visit. 

The gap or gorge is about two miles long, and so narrow at the 
southeastern entrance as to leave barely enough space to accom- 
modate the railroad. The bluffs on either side are bold and pre- 
cipitous, and all the surroundings grandly picturesque. The 
immense power displayed by the river in carving the chasm is awe 
inspiring, while from the summit of the cloven mountain a scene 
of vast breadth and variety fills the onlooker with delight. 

The mountain on the Jersey side bears the now celebrated name 
of Tammany, "an ancient Delaware 
chief, who was canonized during the 
last century, and proclaimed the 
patron saint of America." The 
Pennsylvania mountain bears the 
euphonious Indian name of Minsi. 
Each of these mountains towers six- 
teen hundred feet above the rush- 
ing stream. The river affords excel- 
lent boating and swimming. A well- 
laid golf course is a great addition 
to the Gap and affords opportunities 
for passing many pleasant hours. 



THE UPPER DELAWARE 
VALLEY. 

Within ten minutes ride by train 
or electric car from the Delaware 
Water Gap are the pretty mountain 
towns of Stroudsburg and East 
Stroudsburg which constitute the 
summer capital of this section. 
While Stroudsburg is the county 
seat of Monroe county and the busi- 
ness center of the region, there are a 
number of good hotels here that 
cater to summer visitors, and many 
prefer to Uve here rather than at 
the Water Gap or the resorts along 
the upper Delaware. 





DELAWARE, WATER GAP 



L'C-^ 




Leaving Stroudsburg, one comes 
first to Craig's Meadows, in the 
neighborhood of which may be found 
many fine fishing streams and good 
hunting in season. 

Next comes Marshall's Creek, near 
which are the famous Marshall's 
Falls. The waters of Marshall's 
Creek fall one hundred feet into the 
beautiful Sylva Lake. There is also 
good fishing here. Beyond are Oak 
Grove, where there is combination of 
mountain run and placid Lily Lake; 
Coolbaugh, renowned for the colo- 
nial home of the Coolbaughs, over 
one hundred years old; Echo Lake; 
Turn Villa; Frutcheys, the station 
for Porters Lake, Hunters Range and 
Beaver Run, in the Pike County 
game section, and BushkiU. 

Bushkill is one of the best known 
resorts in this section. The hunting 
and fishing are fine, and many beau- 
tiful excursions may be made to 
interesting points in this charming 
corner of the mountains of north- 
eastern Pennsylvania. 

From Bushkill the visitor takes 
an automobile over the famous shale 
road to Egypt Mills, Dingman's 
Ferry and Milford. At Egypt Mills, 
the beauty of the Valley is unsur- 
passed. "The mountains rise to sheer 
heights on one side and the rippling 
Delaware pursues its course on the other. Dingman's Falls, the 
prettiest in Pike County, are but a short distance away from Ding- 
man's Ferry. 

Vp in the mountains, a thousand feet above Bushkill, is Forest 
Park, a delighful summering place with boating, bathing, fishing 
and all out-door sports. 

T.qminent Lake, within fifteen minutes' walk of the Forest Park 
Hotel, has an area of 100 acres, a depth of sixty feet and a solid 
rock bottom. 



AWAITING THE WILY TROUT 



THE RIVER ABOVE STROUDSBURG 

(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



28 



THE POCONO MOUNTAINS. 

Few inland resorts rival the Pocono Mountains in popularity 
or in beauty and healthfulness. One of the groups which make 
up the Blue Ridge, the Poconos share with the Catskills, the 
Higlilands, and the Land of the Sky in Western Virginia and 
North Carolina an average altitude of two thousand feetabove 
sea level, with heavily-wooded slopes through which brightly- 
rushing streams leap from crag to crag. 

The slopes and plateaus making up the Pocono region embrace 
three hundred square miles of territory. Much of this is almost 
wilderness, in which trout streams and good hunting grounds 
abound. At all seasons of the year the flowers bloom in pro- 
fusion, rhododendrons and laurel wreathing the mountain sides 
for miles. 

The summer temperature in the Poconos is always delightful 
When the large cities and even the country towns are baking in 
mid-summer, the thermometer here seldom goes 
above eighty-five degrees, and more frequently 
it ranges between fifty and seventy degrees 
in the warmest period. 

To the fisherman, the Poconos 
offer many fine mountain brooks 
and streams that fairly teem with 
the wily trout and others of 
the finny tribe. The open 
season is' from April 15th to 
July 15th. 



THE SOUTH SLOPE OF 
THE POCONOS. 

At Analomink and Henry- 
ville, on the southern slope 
of^the Pocono range, there is a 
wide choice in trout streams. 
Here are Broadhead, Paradise, 
Devil's Hole, West and East 
Branch, and Cranberry Creeks. 
These stations are nearly 
eighteen hundred feet above the 
sea level. 

At Cresco is another world of 
angling waters. Three miles to the 
north is Canadensis, where Spruce 
Cabin Inn is the distributing point for 
the fine trout streams of the upper moun- 
tains. Spruce Cabin Falls, the Broadhead, and 
the Little Bushkill each offer attractions hard 
to resist. Beyond are the famed waters of the 
Big Bushkill, one of the most noted trout streams 
of the world. Here one may find a wide variety of fresh water 
fish, inviting the skill of the practiced angler in their capture. 

Mt. Pocono Station, although not the highest point in the 
region, is a particularly delightful spot in which to spend a 
summer. From a hundred points at or near the station views 
of from sixty to one hundred miles may be had, covering almost 
two entire counties of the State of Pennsylvania. There are 
many charming points of interest aside from the beauties of 
scenic prospect. Red Rock Glen, Paradise Falls, Echo Lake, 
Lehigh Falls, Sullivan Springs, Tunnel Knob, and Pocono 
Perch. 

Sixty miles to the south and plainly visible from many points 
near Mt. Pocono is the famous Delaware Water Gap, where 
the mighty river has cut its way through the ridge to the sea. 
Nearby is the Swiftwater, one of the finest fishing streams in 
the State. 




BROADHEAD'S CREEK 



ON THE SUMMIT. 

Pocono Pines is located on the highest plateau on the west 
slope of the mountains, at an elevation of two thousand feet. 
It is about five miles southwest of Pocono Summit, and is 
reached by automobile and livery service over a State macadam 
road. Here is located the Pocono Pines Assembly, a Summer 
School institution providing educational advantages and pro- 
moting general Christian culture. The Assembly owns three 
hundred acres with some open fields, but mostly hemlock, 
spruce, balsam, white and yellow pine timber land, with delight- 
ful walks through rhododendrons and other shrubbery. The 
Assembly grounds are located on a knoll with a gradual descent 
to the lake — a body of water about three and a half miles long 
and a half mile wide. Excellent boating, sailing, and bathing, 
tennis, croquet, and all kinds of athletic sports are features of 
the life. 

THE WILDERNESS. 

At Tobyhanna station the angler may 
cast his flies for twenty miles in the 
Tobyhanna (jallingwaters) stream. The 
region through which it flows from 
the north is the wildest in Penn- 
sylvania. Every rod of that por- 
tion of the Tobyhanna has its 
favorable possibilities as the flies 
are cast for trout. They are 
from seven to ten inches long, 
and perfect in form, colors, and 
markings. Only fifty may be 
lawfully taken in any one day. 
Occasionally deer and bears 
are found in that section, for 
the fastnesses of New Bruns- 
wick or Canada afford no places 
seemingly more removed from 
the haunts of men. 
Buck Hill Falls, some distance 
from Cresco Station, is one of 
the most deUghtful resorts m the 
entire Pocono region and well worth 

a visit. J- T- u 

From the upper waters of 1 oby- 
hanna stream, near Gouldsboro, one 
■ enters the wildest part of Pennsylvania, 
of which there are no real maps extant. 
Every rod of the stream for thirty miles is good 
trout fishing ground, and in the many srnaller 
streams and lakes the angler may find all the 
sport his skill desires. Numerous picturesque 
walks and drives may be taken to interesting points. The water 
supply is of the best and the air is cooL ., , c* ^ t„vi. 

There is no mountain section of the United States which 
offers more attractive conditions to the camper than the 
Poconos. Here the man who desires to rough it may pitch 
his tent beside some icy spring or tumbling brook m the neart 
of the forest primeval with never a sound of civilization with- 
in hearing, and yet still be within easy ^ach of one of the 
fine hotels for which the region is noted, and m touch with 
supplies of all sorts. The lack of these requisites often makes 
a camping trip a labor rather than the acme of pleasure 

which it should be. , , , j- ,. j „„„<.«,= 

Within convenient train distance of the leadmg trade centers 
of the east, this section enables the heads of families to 
summer there and yet keep in close touch with affairs m the 
.big cities. 



(For list of hotels, see pages 30-33. For fares, see pages 34-37.) 



29 



HOTELS 



Allenhurst. N. J. 



Capacity 



Allenhurst Club and 

Cottages 250 

Curlew Cottages. . . . 200 

Loch Arbor 300 

Throckmorton 200 



Amagansett, N. Y. 

Ocean House 40 

Sea View House. ... 75 

Windmill Cottage.. . 50 



Amityville, N. Y. 

Hathaway Inn 75 

Wardle's Hotel 40 



Analomink, Pa. 

Blue Ridge Farm 

House 20 

Lake View Cottage. 50 



Anglesea, N. J. 

Hereford House 60 

Hotel Germantown.. 50 

Hotel Hilton 100 

Hotel Royal, Anne.\ . 75 

Hotel Scott 100 

Inlet House 100 

Lynwood 35 

Walnut Avenue 

House 75 



Arreme, N. Y. 

Colonial Hotel 250 

Majestic House 300 

New Arverne Hotel . 400 

The Breakers 75 



Asbury Park, N. J. 

Aberdeen 150 

Albemarle 120 

Albion 200 

Alhambra 80 

Annesley 75 

Ardsley 125 

Asbury-Kenilworth . 200 

Ashland 100 

Atlantic 100 

Baltimore Inn 80 

Beachwood Inn 80 

Belle View 50 

Bernadina 125 

Bonaventura 50 

Brentwood 50 

Brighton 125 

Buckingham 100 

Cambria 30 

Carlton 125 

Chamberlin 75 

Chatelaine 125 

Chatsworth 35 

Chelsea 50 

Chester 125 

Chfton 90 

Clinton 30 

Coleman House 400 

Colon 140 

Commercial 50 

Continental ISO 

Devonport Inn 175 

Edgemere 250 

Elberon 80 

EUerslie 125 

Fenimore 300 

Gardner ISO 



Capacitv 

Gladstone 100 

Grammercy 150 

Grand Avenue Hotel 2U0 

Grand Central 165 

Grand View 75 

Harvard 75 

Hazlehurst. 50 

Hazleton 50 

Hixson 75 

Holland Hall 100 

Hollywood 100 

Imperial 150 

King's Court 50 

Leadley 12S 

Lyndhurst 150 

Lynn Haven 125 

Magnolia 125 

Manhattan 200 

Marlborough 250 

Maryland 100 

Matthew 75 

Metropolitan 350 

Milton 70 

Minot 90 

Monhagen Cottage.. 60 

Montauk 150 

Moreland 50 

Nassau Hall 200 

Newark 100 

Newburgh 200 

New Pierrepont 100 

Normandie 100 

Ocean Hotel 200 

Ormond 450 

Pierrepont 150 

Philadelphia 75 

Plaza 75 

Princeton 250 

Queen Mary SO 

Raleigh 75 

Regina 100 

Richards House 150 

Roosevelt 100 

St. Charles 50 

St. Clair 160 

St. James 125 

Salt-Aire 60 

Shoreham 100 

Southern 100 

Surf 200 

Taylor 150 

Tenney Hotel and 

Cottages 150 

The Allendorph 150 

The Belmont 40 

The Berkshire 40 

The Delphian 150 

The Lynn Haven. . . 200 

The Royal 80 

The Rutherford 125 

The Wyandank 100 

Victoria 125 

Virginia 100 

Ward Villa 200 

West End Hotel.... 250 

Whelen 300 

Willard 100 

Winthrop 200 



North Asbury Park, N. J. 

Addison 100 

Alameda 150 

Alandane 50 

Amsterdam 130 

Aragon. 130 

Asbury Inn 60 

Auditorium 150 

Berwin 125 

Beverly 125 

Bristol 300 

Brockhurst 150 

Brunswick Hotel 300 

Burrington 300 

Carlisle 125 

Chalfonte 50 

Charles 150 



Capacity 

Claredon 150 

Colonial Hotel 150 

Colonnade Hotel.... 200 

Columbia Hotel 400 

Concord ^5 

Elberta 60 

Fifth Avenue 50 

Florida 100 

Franklin 75 

Frederick 100 

Girard 150 

Hamilton 75 

Ideal View 80 

Knickerbocker ISO 

Lafayette 300 

Lakelyn 100 

Le Roy 200 

Leslie 80 

Lloyd 120 

Loch Arbor 250 

Madison 150 

Monmouth Hotel. . . 350 

New Monterey 600 

New York 130 

Norwood Hall 100 

Park View 300 

Passaic 150 

Pentucket 120 

Pleasure View 50 

Plymouth 60 

Poughkeepsie 200 

Princess. 70 

Ravenswood Inn... . 75 

Reynolds 80 

Richmond Arms. ... 150 

Russwin 50 

St. John 100 

St. Laurent 75 

Sea Breeze 85 

Sea View 70 

Seventh Ave. Inn ... 100 

StaCEord 80 

Stirling 100 

Sunset Ave 100 

Sunset Hall 300 

Thedford 250 

TheWeUington 175 

Touraine 100 

Waldorf 120 

Waldron 100 

Westminster 150 

Zurich 75 



Atlantic City, N. J. 

Acme 100 

Alamac 400 

Albemarle 200 

Allenhurst 50 

Altar HaU 100 

American 100 

Arcadia 100 

Archdale 200 

Ardraore 100 

Ariel 125 

Arlington 200 

Arondale 150 

Ashbourn 100 

Atglen 150 

Austine ISO 

Avoca 100 

Baltimore 100 

Barnay's 150 

Beach HavLii 50 

Beach Villa 125 

Beacon 100 

Beaumont 125 

Beechwood. 150 

Bellaire 150 

Belle Ville SO 

Berkshire Inn 175 

Bingham 125 

Biscayne 150 

Bon Air 100 

Borton 125 

Boscobel 250 

Bothwell 300 



Capacity 

Bouvier 125 

Brady House 150 

Brevoort 100 

Brighton 325 

Brookehurst 100 

Brunswick 100 

Buckingham 100 

Calvert 100 

Canfield 100 

Castro 100 

Cecil 150 

Chalfonte 600 

Channell 200 

Chelsea 600 

Chelsea Haven 100 

Cheltenham-Revere. 150 

Chester Inn 150 

Chetwoode 175 

Clarendon 150 

Clyde 50 

Colonial 125 

Columbia 150 

Col^yn 150 

Continental 300 

Cornell 100 

Craig Hall 400 

Creston 250 

Davenport 125 

Delaware City 100 

De La Mar 75 

De Ville 300 

Dennis 650 

Devonshire 200 

Dixie 125 

Dunlop 250 

Eastbourne 100 

Ebbitt 100 

Edgewater 100 

Edison 150 

Elberon 200 

El Dorado 50 

Fair Haven 75 

Field 75 

Flanders 100 

Francis 100 

Fredonia 200 

Frontenac 150 

Gadsby 100 

Galen HaU 400 

Gladstone 200 

Glaslyn-Chatham. . . 200 

Glenside 125 

Goodfellow 250 

Grand Atlantic 500 

Greater Pittsburg. . . 125 

Grossman 350 

Haddon Hall 450 

Halcyon Hall 50 

Hamilton Hall 250 

Hatboro 100 

Holmhurst 300 

Howard 100 

Hygeia 100 

Imperial 200 

Iroquois 350 

Islesworth 500 

Jackson 250 

Kenderton 100 

Kenwood 75 

Kentucky 150 

Kuehnle's 100 

La Belle Inn 175 

La Fontaine 125 

Lakewood 100 

Lambom 250 

Larchmont 100 

Lawrence 125 

Leedom 100 

Leland 150 

Lexington 150 

Liberty House 75 

Lockhart 150 

Loraine 150 

Louella 75 

Louwan 50 

Lyric 75 

McGinley 100 

Majestic 200 



Capacity 

Malatesta 100 

Manhattan 150 

Marlborough - Blen- 
heim 1100 

Melrose 75 

Mervine ISO 

Miller Cottage 250 

Monticello 200 

Morton 200 

Mt. Vernon 150 

MuUica 100 

Muncaster 100 

Netherland 300 

New Belmont 125 

New Chatham 125 

New Clarion 200 

New Elwood 1 50 

New England 300 

New Florence 125 

New Fayette 200 

New Holland 150 

New Marion 200 

Normandie 150 

Norwood 150 

Ocean Sprav 200 

Orville 100 

Ostend 400 

Pacific 200 

Pembroke 100 

Pennhurst 200 

Phillips House 200 

Pierrepont 200 

Pitney 150 

Ponce de Leon 200 

Princess 200 

Radnor 50 

Raleigh 300 

Ralston 100 

Ravenroyd 100 

Raymond 100 

Renovo 150 

Richmond 200 

Rockdale 100 

Roman 75 

Ro.xborough 250 

Royal Palace 600 

Rudolf 800 

Runnymede 200 

St. Clare 200 

St. Charles 350 

St. Elmo 50 

St. James 100 

San Jose SO 

Savoy 400 

SchUtz 300 

Seabright 150 

Seabrooke 100 

Sea Crest 150 

Seaside 250 

Seery 100 

Seminole 100 

Sewickley 50 

Shackamaxon 100 

Shelbume 400 

Shoreham 200 

Silverside ISO 

Sinclair 150 

Somerset 75 

Sothem ISO 

Stanley ISO 

Stanton 200 

States Villa 75 

Sterling 200 

Strand 500 

Strath Haven 125 

Tabor Inn 125 

Tracy 50 

Traymore 1400 

Trexler SO 

Trov House 100 

Villa Nova 200 

Waldorf 100 

Warwick 200 

Watkin's 150 

Wellsboro 150 

Westminster 200 

Westmont 250 

Whittier 150 



#- 



30 



^ 



HOTELS 



Capacity 

Atlantic City, N. J. 
(Continued. J 

Whittle 200 

"Williard 150 

Wiltshire 300 

Worthington 175 

Yarmouth 300 

Two hundred 

others 15.000 

One thousand board- 
ing houses 40,000 



Avalon, N. J. 

Homestead Cottage. 50 

Hotel Avalon 200 

Hotel Princeton 100 

The Luray 25 

The Sherwood 100 



Avon-by-the-Sea, N. J. 

Avon Inn 250 

Buckingham 250 

Hotel Marlborough. 150 

Stratford Inn 175 

Sylvan 25 

Seven Cottages 250 



Babylon, N. Y. 

La Grange House ... 75 

Muncie Island Hotel 125 

Sherman House 50 

Watson House 100 

Bamegat, N. J. 

Almont Inn 100 

Clarence House 100 

Cottages 100 

Barnegat City, N. J. 

Oceanic 350 

Sunset 150 

Three others 100 

Bay Head, N. J. 

Bellevue 100 

Gren ville Arms 200 

Hotel Grenville 100 

Ocean View House. . 180 

The Bluffs 250 

Five Cottages 60 

Bayshore, N. Y. 

Dominy House 50 

New Surf Hotel 

(Ocean Beach).... 200 
Saltaire Casino 

(Saltaire) 50 

The Inn (Point 

O'Woods) 125 

The Lin wood 1 00 

Beach Haven, N. J. 

Baldwin House 400 

Beach Haven House. 150 

Engleside 400 

Hotel Acme 50 

Ocean House 100 

St. Rita 40 

Two Cottages 40 



Beach Haven Terrace, N. J. 
Clearview Hotel. ... 75 



Bedford, Pa. 



Capacily 



Arandale 200 

Bedford House 50 

Bedford Springs. .. . 600 

Chalybeate Springs. 125 

Corle House 50 

Grand Central 75 

Union House 50 



Heliport, N. Y. 

Goldthwaite Inn 80 

Wyandotte Hotel. . . 120 



Belmar, N. J. 

American House .... 50 

Belmar Inn 50 

Buena Vista 250 

Brunswick House. . . 150 

Carlton Hotel 150 

Carter's Hotel 50 

Colorado House. . . . 250 
Columbia Hotel. .. . 400 
Delaware House and 

Cottage 125 

Girard House 40 

Grand View 100 

Melrose Inn 300 

Neptune House 150 

New England House 

and Cottages 50 

Ocean View Hotel... 100 
River Road Inn. . . . 150 

Roseland 30 

The Atlantic 175 

The Belmont 75 

The Cedars 125 

The Clyde 50 

The Llanymore 100 

The Madison 25 

The Sagamore 125 

The Woodbine 75 

Westmore and 

Cottages 1 00 

Willow Glen 40 

Windsor House 150 

Ten Cottages 300 



Bemus Point, N. Y. 

Bemus Point Inn. . . 100 

Columbia Inn 100 

Hotel Browning. ... SO 

Lenhart House 150 

Pickard House 200 

Blue Point, N. Y. 

Hallett House 300 

W^amer House 400 



Bradley Beach, N. J. 

Beach View Hotel . . 100 

Bradley Beach House 100 

Franklin Villa 75 

Hotel La Reine 400 

Lakensea 75 

Sea Cliff 60 

Seaward 50 

Fifteen Cottages 250 



Brant Beach, N. J. 

Brant House 25 

Bridgehampton, N. Y. 
Topping House 25 



Brielle, N. J.« 

Janvier 20 

Reed House 35 

Three Cottages 70 



Bushkill, Pa. 

Buena Vista House . 25 
Forest Park Hotel 
(P.O. Forest Park) 400 

Maple Grove 50 

Mountain House — 30 

Peters House 125 

Riverside House 100 

The Maples 30 

Valley View F.i rm . . . 30 



Cape May, N. J- 

Baltimore Inn 150 

Carroll Villa SO 

Chalfonte 250 

Colonial 200 

(i!olumbia 300 

Devon 100 

Elberon 100 

Elwood 125 

Hotel Cape Mav 600 

Hotel Royal 125 

Lafayette 300 

Star Villa 200 

The Rudolph 50 

The Virginia 100 

Victoria 50 

Windsor Hotel 200 

Wyoming 75 

Twenty others 750 



Chautauqua, N. Y. 

Albion 40 

Aldine 50 

Ashland 50 

Beaujean 50 

Belvidere 150 

Bryant 35 

Carey Cottage 150 

College Inn 40 

Colonade ISO 

Colonial 50 

Columbia 100 

Cook Cottage 40 

Cooper Cottage 30 

Gale Cottage 30 

Gleason Cottage. ... 25 

Glen Cottage 40 

Glen Park 30 

Hallhurst 50 

Hotel Athenaeum. . . 500 

Indiana Cottage. . . . 150 

Keystone 75 

Lake Front 70 

Lebanon (Cottage. . . 150 

Linwood 30 

Longfellow 50 

Morey Cottage 150 

Muncie Cottage. . . . 150 

National 30 

New Weslev 40 

New York.' 150 

Niagara 30 

Ohio 150 

Panama 40 

Pennsylvania 40 

Pittsburgh ISO 

Rochester 60 

St. Elmo 75 

Spencer (Cottage 150 

Vermont 30 

Westfield Cottage... 40 

Widrig 60 



Capacity 



Coolbaugh, Pa. 

College Inn 30 

Davidson Summer 

Institute 50 

Delaware Valley Inn 40 

Echo Valley House. 40 

Oak Ridge House... 30 

Overfield House. ... 25 

Craig's Meadows, Pa. 

Liberty House 20 

Mackasy House .... 30 
Mountain Breeze 

Cottage 25 

Sun Kissed House. . . 20 

Water Front House. 25 

Cresco, Pa. 

Brewer Cottage 35 

Cliff View 40 

(ilencairn Villa 
(P. O. Canadensis) 25 

Glenmere Cottage 
(P. O. Canadensis) 35 

Heller's Mount Airy 
(P. O. Mountain- 
home) 60 

Hotel Cresco 30 

Laurel Grove House 
(P. O. Canadensis) 50 

Levis Falls House 
(P. O. Canadensis) 25 

Monomonock Inn 
(P. O. Mountain- 
home) 100 

Mountain Lake 
House (P. O. Can- 
adensis) 60 

Mountainside Cot- 
tage (P. O. Cana- 
densis) 20 

Mountain View 
Farm (P. O. Cana- 
densis) 25 

Paradise Inn 75 

Pine Grove Cottage 
(P. O. Canadensis) 25 

Pine Knob Inn 
(P. O. Canadensis) 50 

Pleasant Ridge 
H o u s e {P. O. 
Mountainhome) . . 60 

Spruce Cabin Inn 
(P.O. Canadensis) 150 

Spruce Mountain 
H o u s e (P. O. 
Canadensis) 50 

The Antlers 35 

The Henry Price 
Cottages (P. O. 
Mountainhome) . . SO 

The Inn (Buck Hill 
Falls) 200 

The Oriental 25 

The Overlook (P. O. 
Canadensis) ...... 25 

The Pinehurst (P. O. 
Canadensis) 60 

The Pines (P. O. 
Canadensis) 100 

The Poplars (P. O. 
Canadensis) 25 

The Rudolph 75 

Villa Brentini (P. O. 
Canadensis) 50 

Woodlawn House 
(P. O. Mountain- 
home) 25 

Deal Beach, N. J. 

Deal Country Club 

Cottages 100 

Hathaway Inn 250 

Ocean View 1 00 

Roseld Inn 100 



Capacity 

Delaware Water Gap, 
Pa. 

Bridge View House. 35 
Caldeno Cottage... . 25 

Castle Inn 50 

Cataract House 200 

Cherry Valley 20 

Courtenay Lodge. . . 25 
Delaware House. ... 50 

Forest House 65 

Laurel Ridge 40 

Pokona 35 

River Farm House.. 35 

Riverside Hotel 1 00 

River View House. . 100 
Shawnee House (P. 
O. Shawnee on 

Delaware) 50 

The Bellevue 150 

The Central and 

Annex 100 

The Edgewood 

House 25 

The Glenwood 400 

The Howard 20 

The Karamac Inn.. 125 

The Kittatinny 500 

The Oaks 35 

The Stratford 25 

The Willow Dell (P. 
O. North Water 

Gap) 60 

Valley View 30 

Water Gap House. . 500 



Dingman's Ferry, Pa. 

Adams' Brook Farm. 50 

Bellevue Hotel 30 

Bluff House 350 

Delaware House. ... 30 

High Falls Hotel. .. 120 

Huntingtover Inn. . . 60 

Pine Hill House 40 

Shady Lawn 40 



Easthampton, N. Y. 

Maidstone Inn 100 

Osborne House 50 

The Hunting House, 60 



Ebensburg, Pa. 

Ebensburg Inn 150 

Exchange 100 

Hotel Bender 50 

Metropolitan 75 

Mountain House 125 



Echo Lake, Pa. 

Echo Lake House. . . 75 



Elberon, N. J. 

Chadwick House..,. 70 
Eaton House 30 



Far Rockaway, N. Y. 

Clarendon Hall 50 

Far Rockawav Hotel 100 

Greyloch Hall 125 

Hotel Belvidere 100 

La Grange Seminole. 100 

Ocean View House. . 50 

Savoy Hotel 75 

The Elms 30 



31 



HOTELS 



Capacity 

Freeport, N. Y. 

Crystal Lake Hotel. 125 



Frutcheys, Pa. 

Hillside House 40 

Ridge View House. . 60 



Garden City, N. Y. 

Garden City Hotel. . 400 

Glen Cove, N. Y. 

The Hall 150 



Good Ground, N. Y. 

Arlington Hotel 85 

Bellows House 100 

Ocean View House . . 60 

Seacrest House 40 



Gouldsboro, Pa. 

Mountain View 
Cottage (P. 
O. South Ster- 
ling) 25 



Greenhurst, N. Y. 

Hotel Greenhurst... 100 

Greenport, N, Y. 

Bay House (P. 0. 

Orient) 50 

Booth House 25 

Mt. Pleasant House 

(P. 0. Orient) 100 

Orient Point Inn 

(P. O. Orient) ... . 100 
Wyandank Hotel.. . 75 

Griffiths, N. Y. 

Sheldon Hall 200 

Soderholm Cottage.. 50 

Harvey Cedars, N. J. 

-Atlantic House 50 

Harvey Cedars Hotel 200 

Henryville, Pa. 

Greenway Court .... 20 

Henryville House. . . 75 
Mountain Laurel 

Cottage 30 

Panther Hill Farm 

House 25 



High Point, N. J. 
High Point Inn.. 



Huntington, N. Y. 
Edgewater Hotel.. 



Capacity 

Island Heights, N. J. 

Oak Hurst Inn 

The Perennial 100 

Several boarding 
houses 100 



Islip, N. Y. 

Orowoc Hotel 30 

Jamesport, N. Y. 

Great Peconic Bay 

House 150 

Miamogue House... 125 

Jamestown, N. Y. 

Everett Hotel ISO 

Hotel Frederick 150 

Humphrey House. . . 400 
The Samuels 600 

Keller, Va. 

Hotel Wachaprague. 100 

Lakewood, N. Y. 

New Holbrook 150 

Long Beach, N. Y. 

Hotel Abel 70 

Nassau Hotel 500 



Long Branch, N. J. 

Atlantic Hotel 200 

Columbia Hotel. .. . 50 

Commercial Hotel... 50 

Dalton's Hotel 50 

Hotel Gordon 100 

Hotel Norwood 50 

Hotel Phelando 200 

Hotel Vendome 100 

Huyler Cottage 50 

Imperial Hotel SO 

Naple Hotel 200 

Pannaci's Hotel 200 

Scarboro Hotel 300 

Takanassee Hotel.. . 300 

Third Ave. Hotel ... SO 

Victoria 50 



Longport, N. J. 

Aberdeen Hotel 200 

Oberon Hotel 75 



Manahawken, N. J. 

National 30 

Cottages 100 



Manasquan, N. J. 

Osborne House 75 

Squan House 50 

The Jackson 40 

Si.x Cottages 50 



Mantoloking, N. J. 

The Albertson 100 



Capacity 

Maple Springs, N. Y. 

Campbell Cottage... 75 

Newberry House.. . . 75 

The New Elizabeth. 40 

The Whiteside 75 



Marshall's Creek, Pa. 

Highland Retreat.. . 30 
Marshall s Falls 

House 50 

Mountain Lake 

House 25 

North View House . . 20 

Sunset House 50 

Tannebaum Farm... 20 

Titania House 20 



Massapequa, N. Y. 

Massapequa Hotel. . 200 

Mattituck, N. Y. 

Mattituck Harbor 

Inn 75 

Shady Po'nt House. 30 
The Anniston House 100 

Mayville, N. Y. 

Central House 100 

Mayville House 125 

Thompson House. . . 100 

Montauk, N. Y. 

Montauk Inn 20 

Moriches, N. Y. 

Ocean House 45 

Tuthill Point House. 100 
Watchogue House. . . 60 



Mount Gretna, Pa. 

Gretna Hall loo 

Gretna Inn 200 

Hotel Conewago .... 300 

Hotel Kauflman 100 

WoodcUffe Hall 50 



Mount Pocono, Pa. 

Chestnut Grove 
House (P. O. 

Swiftwater) 25 

Clairmont House ... 85 

Fairview House 75 

Farm Rest 25 

Grove Cottage 15 

Hawthorne Sanato- 
rium and Cottages 60 
Hemlock Cottage.. . 25 

Meadowside Inn 100 

Mount Pleasant 

House 200 

Pocono Mountain 

House 200 

Pocono Heights 

House 40 

The Casa Loma 

Cottage 20 

The Elvin 75 

The Forest House 
(P. O. Swiftwater') 35 



Capacity 
The Mountain View 

House 25 

The Ontwood 150 

The Swiftwater (P. 

O. Swiftwater) ... 100 
The Wicasset Bun- 
galows and Cen- 
tral Dining Hall. . 30 



North Beach Haven, N. J. 

The Breakers 120 

Waverly House 75 



Oak Grove, Pa. 

Oak Grove House ... 125 



Ocean City, Md. 

Adams House 25 

Atlantic 350 

Avondale 25 

Belmont 50 

Brighton 75 

Breakers 50 

Colonial 75 

Congress Hall 100 

Dennis House 50 

Eastern Shore 50 

Gables 20 

Glendale 30 

Hamilton 150. 

Idlewild SO 

Mervue 40 

Mt. Pleasant 125 

Mt. Vernon 50 

New Avalon 75 

New Windsor 75 

Nordica 75 

Oceanic 25 

Plimhimmon 200 

Rideau 50 

Seabright 25 

Sea Crest 15 

Seaside 100 

Tarry-a-While...;.. 25 

Virginia 40 

Wetipkin 50 



Ocean City, N. J. 

Arlington 125 

Atglen 150 

Bellevue 300 

Berkley 200 

Biscayne 150 

Breakers 350 

Brighton 300 

Chalfonte 150 

Driftwood 75 

Elberon 125 

Elbonar 100 

Geneveivea 75 

Hewlings 150 

Idlewild 100 

Illinois-on-Strand. . . 125 

Imperial 125 

Kathlee 100 

Lafayette 125 

Luray 125 

Mayberry 250 

New Hartford 125 

Normandie 600 

Oceanic 250 

Oxford 100 

Raleigh 200 

Piqua 125 

Scarborough 200 

Strand 250 



Capacitj' 

Swarthmore 150 

Traymore 200 

Waverly 125 

White Hall 200 

And thirty others of 
lesser Capacity 



Ocean Gate, N. J. 

.'Vsbury House 10 

Emerald Cottage. . . 10 

Hotel Keisel 25 

Ocean Gate Inn. .. . 20 

Park House 20 



Ocean Grove, N. J. 

Aberdeen 70 

Alaska 200 

Albatross 75 

Arborton 125 

Ardmore 110 

ArHngton 200 

Atlantic House 100 

Auditorium House. . 60 

Aurora 100 

Bancroft Rest Home 50 

Bath Avenue House. 60 

Beaumont 75 

Boscobel 80 

Breakers 80 

Breeze 80 

Broadway House. . . 55 

Brooklyn 65 

Brunswick 60 

Bryn MawT 125 

Buena Vista 60 

Centennial 75 

Clarendon 100 

Colonial 110 

Columbia 65 

DeWitt 70 

Eldorado 80 

EUwood 60 

Empire 50 

Everett SO 

Fountain House.. . . 200 

Grand View 60 

Grove Hall 60 

Guilford 50 

Highland 80 

Holland 60 

Hollywood 55 

Hotel Grand 60 

Howland House. ... 120 

Inskip 60 

Ivy House 100 

Jackson House 85 

Lafayette 60 

Lake Villa 60 

Lakeside 55 

Lane Villa 75 

LaPierre 125 

Lawrence 70 

LeChevalier 150 

Lillagard 80 

Loraine 75 

Lyndale Inn 60 

Main Ave. House.. . 60 

Majestic 90 

Manchester 60 

Mansion House 50 

Marlborough 75 

Mulford 60 

National 65 

New Philadelphia.. , 70 

Norman House 70 

North End 450 

Ocean Ave. House. . 75 

Ocean Grove Hotel.. 80 

Ocean House 100 

Ocean View 125 

Olive House 60 

Ormond 100 

Osbom House 75 



32 



HOTELS 



capacity 
Ocean Grove, N. J. 
(Continued.) 

Park View 125 

Queen 80 

St. Cloud 60 

St. Elmo 75 

Seacroft 60 

Seaside 160 

Spray View 80 

Stewart . 60 

Stratford 70 

Summerfield 70 

Sunset Lodge SO 

Surf Ave. House. ... 90 

United States 200 

Warrington 100 

Washington Villa. , . 60 

Whitfield 100 

Wilmington 50 

Windsor 50 

Ocean View, Va. 

Ocean View 100 

Old Point Comfort, Va. 

Hotel Sherwood .... 250 

The Chamberlin 600 

Oyster Bay, N. Y. 

Oyster Bay Inn 100 

Sagamore Hotel .... 75 

Patchogue, N. Y. 

Laurel House 1 50 

New CHffton Hotel. 400 
Ocean Avenue Hotel 275 

Patchogue Inn 100 

Roe's Hotel 75 

Smithport Hotel. ... 75 

Peaheala, N. J. 

Club House 20 

Pine Beach, N. J. 

Pine Beach Inn 200 

Pocono Summit, Pa. 

Blakeslee Homestead 

and Farm (P. O. 

Pocono Pines) .... 25 
Lake View House (P. 

O. Pocono Lake).. 50 
Laurel Inn (P. O. 

Pocono Lake) .... 75 
Mountain Summit 

House 25 

Naomi Pines House 

(P.O.PoconoPines) 40 
Pocono Dairy Farm 

(P. O. Preserve). . IS 
Pocono Lake Hotel 

(P.O.PoconoPines) 40 
Pocono Manor (P. 

O. Pocono Manor) 175 
Van Vorst Farm (P. 

O. Pocono Lake) . 25 

Point Chautauqua, N. Y. 

Barnes House. ..... 100 

Lakeside Cottage. . . 100 

Pease Cottage. ..... 75 

The Inn 100 

Point Pleasant, N. J. 

Ardmore 75 

Beacon-by-the-Sea. . 200 

Blossom Cottage.. . . 75 

Carrolton 150 

Curtis House 125 

Gladstone 60 

Hotel Marion 60 

Hotel Richmond 50 



Cal>.^cit\- 

Land's End Hotel... 150 

Leomere 100 

Maple Grove House. 125 

Pine Bluff Inn 200 

Point Pleasant Cot- 
tage 75 

Riverside House. ... 150 

The Leighton 250 

West Point Pleasant 

House 50 

Fifteen others 500 

Port Jefferson, N. Y. 

Bayside House 25 

Darlington House... 25 

Quogue, N. Y. 

Cooper House 50 

East Quogue House. 50 

Pine Grove House , . 60 

Walker House 175 

Rehoboth Beach, Del. 

Belhaven - by - the - 

Ocean 200 

Brayton 150 

Hotel Henlopen 200 

Townsend 100 

Two Hundred Cot- 
tages 1000 

Riverhead, N. Y. 

Griffin House 80 

Long Island House. 75 

Sag Harbor, N. Y. 

Nassau Hotel 60 

Sea View Hotel 
(Noyack) 100 

Sayville, N. Y. 

Delevan Hotel 75 

Hotel Elmore 150 

Kensington Hotel... 40 

Seaside House 50 

Sea Cliff, N. Y. 

Battershall Inn 60 

Hotel Pinnacle 100 

Kenwood Hotel 150 

Linwood House 50 

Sound View Hotel. . 100 

Sea Girt, N. J. 

Beach House 300 

Locust Cottage 50 

Parker House 150 

Tremont House 200 

Sea Isle City, N. J. 

Aldine 50 

Bellevue 100 

Busch Hotel 75 

Colonnade SO 

Depot Hotel SO 

Girard House SO 

Hahn's SO 

Lafayette SO 

Mansion 50 

Pennsylvania Hotel. 100 

Petersen's Hotel. ... 50 

Philadelphia House. SO 

Seminole 75 

Stevens 100 

Surf House 100 

Thirty others 1200 

Seaside Heights, N. J. 

Sheridan House 40 

Sumner Hotel 30 

Seaside Park, N. J. 

The Gladwyn Hotel. 70 

The Hiawatha 150 

The Kittatinny 70 

The Manhasset 350 



Shelter Island, N. Y. 

Chequit Inn... 100 

Oxford House 100 

Prospect House 300 

Shelter Island House SO 

Shoemakers or Winona, Pa. 

Winona House 50 

Southampton, N. Y. 

Commercial Hotel. . 60 

Irving House 100 

Southold, N. Y. 

Paumonok Inn 100 

Southold Hotel 50 

Spray Beach, N. J. 

Spray Beach Hotel.. 100 

Spring Lake, N. J. 

Allaire House 250 

Colonial 200 

Essex and Sussex 

Hotel 450 

Lucas Cottages 100 

New Monmouth 500 

Palmer House 150 

Shoreham 200 

The Breakers 250 

Eight others 750 

Stone Harbor, N. J. 

Harbor Inn ,S0 

Shelter Haven 1 00 

Seven Boarding 

Houses 225 

Stroudsburg, Pa. 

Churleigh Inn 125 

Hemlock Grove 

House 35 

Highland Inn 100 

Hillside House 50 

Hotel Fulmer 150 

Indian Queen Hotel. ISO 
Lake House (P. O. 

Saylorsburg) 75 

Lyndhurst 35 

Maple-in-the-Pines.. 40 
Old Homestead 

Cottage 40 

Prospect House 70 

The Penllyn SO 

Vineyard Cottage 

(P. O. East 

Stroudsburg) .... 60 



Surf City, N. J. 

Surf House 150 



Tobyhanna, Pa. 

The Sterling (P. O. 
South Sterling) ... 40 



Toms River, N. J. 

Berkeley Arms 50 

Central Hotel SO 

Ocean House 100 

Riverside Hotel 75 

Three others 150 

Tuckerton, N. J. 

Carlton House 100 

Cottages 100 



Capacity 
Turn Villa, Pa. 

Turn Villa 100 

Virginia Beach, Va. 

Arlington 130 

Atantic Cottage 40 

Blue Sea 25 

Burbank Cottage. . . SO 

Driftwood Cottage. . 35 

Edgemere Cottage . . 75 

Ferebee 70 

Fitzhugh Cottage. . . 70 

Gardner Cottage 100 

Greenlee 40 

Hancock Cottage ... 30 

Kenilworth 30 

Kinsey Cottage 50 

Ocean Wave 

Cottage 75 

Pine Grove Cottage , 20 

Pocahontas Cottage. 70 

Queen Anne Cottage 50 

Spottswood Arms. . . 100 

Waverly 60 

White Cottage 40 

Williamson Cottage. 30 

Waretown, N. J. 

Bay view House 80 

Centennial Hotel. . . 50 
Meadow Brook 

House 25 

Various Cottages. . . 50 

West Creek, N. J. 

West Creek Hotel. . . 50 
Cottages 100 

West End (Holly- 
wood), N. J. 

Hotel Henry 200 

Hotel Takanasee. ... 500 

Westhampton, N. Y. 
Apaucuck Point 

House 100 

Hampton Inn 125 

Howell House 125 

The Moorland 

House 80 

Wildwood, N. J. 

Abbey 60 

Adelphi 200 

Aldine 100 

Arcadia 75 

Arlington 150 

Bartram 100 

Beechwood 175 

Belmont 50 

Berwind 50 

Bidwell 75 

Brighton 50 

Cedar Hall 150 

Colonial 150 

Continental 200 

Cromwell 150 

Delwyn 75 

Derbyshire 125 

Dickson-Pittsburg.. 12S 

Edgeton Inn 225 

Eleanor 60 

Elmira 50 

Engleside 50 

Fenwick 60 

Fremont SO 

Gettysburg 50 

Girard SO 

Gladstone (Apart- 

ment House) 100 

Glenwood 1 00 

Grand View 50 

Greenlee 100 



Lai.acity 

Grennoble Hotel. ... 75 

Greylock ISO 

Haddon Hall ISO 

Harlan Villa SO 

Haverford SO 

Havilla 100 

Home SO 

Hotel Dayton 225 

Hotel Dorsey 250 

Hotel Hamlet 75 

Hotel Seipp 125 

Idlewild 75 

Imperial 75 

Ira Dell SO 

Ivy Cottage SO 

Kennedy 125 

Keystone 125 

Lansdown 75 

Lightfoot 50 

Lorraine 50 

Lyndhurst 100 

Magnolia SO 

Marion 50 

Maryland 50 

Melrose SO 

New Centre House . . 90 

Oaklyn 150 

Ottens ISO 

Pacific House 75 

Philadelphia House. 40 

Pinehurst SO 

Rowland Hall SO 

Roxboro SO 

Royal Inn ISO 

Ruth Lynn 75 

Savoy 150 

Seacrest 200 

Sea Wave 75 

Severn Hall 100 

Sheldon 200 

Silver Leaf SO 

Somerset SO 

St. Charles 100 

Temple Hall 50 

The Alberta 50 

The Chelten 50 

The CHnton 75 

The Douglass 100 

The Franklin 100 

Thelma 75 

The Pines 75 

The Plaza 125 

The Rudolph SO 

The Strand 100 

Toledo 50 

Travith 75 

Virginia 50 

Wayne 125 

Washington 75 

Westminister 75 

Wildwood Manor. . . 350 

Wilhelm SO 

Willard Hall 75 

Willows SO 

Wills 100 

Windsor 125 

Winona 12S 

Woodlawn 50 

Woodlea 50 

Wildwood Crest, N. J. 

Atlanta 75 

Belmar 150 

Breakers 150 

Bonni Venture 50 

Justice 75 

Mt. Vernon 125 

Ocean Crest Hotel . . 150 
Schoener Apart- 

ments 50 

Seward Apartments. 100 

Theckla Hall 80 

The Pelham 100 

The Prospect 75 

Widdows Apart- 

ments 50 



33 



ROUND TRIP FARES 

Tickets limited 6 months from date of sale, except as noted. 



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Altoona, Pa.... 
Baltimore, Md. 



Bradford. Pa. 
Butler, Pa 



Buffalo. N. Y. ._.... 
Canandaigua, N. Y. 
Chambersburg, Pa.. 



19.74 

®21.75 

(B;21.58 

20.75 

17.90 

11.55 



Clearfield, Pa 

Cresson, Pa 

Cumberland, Md. 
Delmar, Del 



Elmira, N. Y... 

Erie, Pa 

Frederick, Md. . 



Greensburg, Pa. .. 
Harrisburg, Pa. . . 
Lancaster, Pa. . . . 

Lebanon, Pa 

NewYork,"N.'Y.' 



Oil City, Pa 

Olean, N. Y 

Philadelphia, Pa.. 



Phillipsburg, N. J. , 
Pittsburgh, Pa 



Pottsville, Pa., 
Reading, Pa. . , 



Rochester. N. Y. 
Sunbury, Pa, . . . 



Trenton, N. J. 



Tyrone, Pa 

■Washington, b'.'C 
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. . . 



$15.49 



8.55 



16.83 



16.25 

'is.Vs 



9.97 



15.16 

21.75 



®11.23 
19.73 



®$14.22 

®14.72 

® 7.30 

® 7.80 

19.74 

©20.65 

@20.33 

20.75 

17.90 

10.30 



115.49 
"8.55 



19.74 
@21.75 
©21.58 
20.75 
17.90 
11.55 



8.95 



7.17 



8.23 



@ 1.90 
"i 1.70 
21.75 
18,84 
@ 3,00 
@ 3.75 
® 4.35 
@ 3,25 
® 3.95 
@ 3,65 



®1S,58 
®16,08 
®15,00 
®15,50 
®17,30 
®17,80 
® 8.72 
® 9.22 
15.16 
21,75 
® 9,98 
,® 10,48 
1®18,48 
®18,98 
® 7,70 
® 8,20 
® 5,92 
® 6,42 
® 6,98 
® 7,48 
6,50 



21.25 



8,41 



21,75 

18,84 

® 2,50 

® 3,00 



® 6,00 

® 6,50 

19,75 



19.06 
10.26 



® 2.50 



14.79 

io.'s's 
©io.'ie 



Williamsport, Pa.. 



York, Pa, 



® 9,74 
12,26 



® 8.43 
®10.31 



® 7.16 
® 7.66 
® 5.42 
® 5.92 
19,06 
®10,26 
®10.76 
(g) 3.65 
@ 4.40 
® 4,20 
® 4.34 
®13.54 
®14,04 
® 9,30 
® 9,80 
® 10.26 
@10.76 
@ 9.74 
®12,26 
®12.76 
® 7.18 
® 7.68 
® 9,06 
@ 9,56 



®I13,97 

®14.47 

® 7.05 

® 7.55 

19.49 

©20,65 

@20,33 

20,75 

17,65 

10,05 



16.83 
' i6.'25 



18.55 
■"9.97 



15,16 
21.75 



®11.23 
19.73 



8.23 



@ 1.95 
® 1.75 
21,75 
18,84 
@ 3,00 
@ 3,75 
® 4.35 
S) 3.25 
® 3.95 
® 3,65 



®15,33 
®15,83 
®14,75 
®15,25 
®17,05 
®17,55 
® 8.47 
® 8,97 
14,91 
21,75 
® 9,73 
®10,23 
®18,23 
®18,73 
® 7,45 
® 7,95 
® 5,67 
® 6,17 
® 6,73 
® 7,23 
6,00 



21,25 



8.41 
'6,67 



19,06 
10.26 



@ 2.45 



14.79 

' io.'ss 



©10.26 



® 9,74 
12,26 



®J13.97 

®14.47 

® 7,05 

® 7,55 

19,49 

©20.65 

©20,33 

20,75 

17.65 

10.05 



115.39 
"8,45 



fl4,24 



7.30 



19,74 
©21,75 
©21,48 
20,75 
17,90 
11,45 



19.74 
©20,90 
©20,58 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 



21.75 

18,59 

® 2,25 

® 2,75 



® 5,75 

® 6,25 

19,75 



® 8,43 
©10,31 



® 6,91 
® 7,41 
® 5,17 
® 5,67 
18,81 
®10,01 
®10,51 
@ 3,40 
@ 4,15 
® 3,95 
® 4,09 
®13,29 
®13,79 
® 9.05 
® 9.55 
®10.01 
® 10.51 
@ 9.49 
®12.01 
®12.51 
® 6.93 
® 7.43 
® 8.81 
© 9,31 



®I5.33i 
®15,83 
®14,75 
®15,25 
®17,05 
®17,55 
® 8,72 
® 9,22 
14.91 
21,75 
® 9,73 
®10,23 
®18,23 
®18,73 
® 7,45 
® 7.95 
® 5,67 
® 6.17 
® 6.73 
® 7.23 
6.25 



15.16 
21.75 



16.73 


15.58 


16.15 


15.00 


18.45 


17.30 


9.87 


8.72 



15.16 
21.75 



®$14.49 

S15.34 

® 7.55 

!® 8.40 

19.84 

ff21,75 

r; 2 1,43 

' 20,85 

18,10 

hS)11,40 

@10,55 

®15,83 

©16,68 

®15,25 

©16,10 

©17,55 

©18,40 

® 8,97 

1® 9.82 

! 15.26 

I 21.85 



21.75 

18.59 

® 2,25 

® 2.75 



®11.13 
19.63 

"'8.85 



7.07 



8.13 



@ 2,05 
® 1.85 
21,75 
18,84 
® 2.90 
@ 3.65 
® 4.25 
® 3.15 



® 9.98 
18.48 

'"i'.m 



S.92 
'6.98 



4.80 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2,50 

3.50 



10,23 
©18.73 
©19.58 
© 7.95 
© 8.80 
© 6.17 
© 7.02 
® 7.23 
® 8,08 
i@ 2,30 
© 2.20 
21.85 
18.94 
® 2.75 



® 5.75 

® 6.25 

19.75 



® 6.91 
® 7.41 
® 5.17 
® 5.67 
18,81 
®10,01 
®10,S1 
@ 3,40 
@ 4,15 
® 3,95 
® 4,09 
®13,29 
®13,79 
® 9,05 
® 9,55 
®10,01 
©10,51 
@ 9,49 
®12,01 
®12,51 
® 6.93 
® 7.43 
® 8.81 
© 9,31 



@ 3,65 i® 5.79 



® 2.85 
; 3,60 
® 4,35 
" 3,90 



21.15 20,00 



6,57 



19,06 
10.26 



19.06 
10.26 



® 2.35 ® 4.20 
@ 3.25 



14,69 



10,45 

©io.'fe 



® 9.74 
12.26 



13.54 



9.30 
@i6.'26' 



@ 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.33 ® 7.18 
©10.21 ,® 9.06 



®20.25 
®21.10 
® 7.41 
® 8.26 
® 5.67 
® 6.52 
19,16 
®10,26 
®10,36 
@ 2,45 
@ 2.87 



J14.24 ■ 
7,'30 



$14,24 

7, 'id 



19,74 
@20,90 
©20,58 
20,75 
17,90 
10,30 



15,58 

" is,'o'o' 



17.30 

"i'.ii 



15.16 
21.75 



19.74 
©20.90 
©20,58 
20,75 
17,90 
10,30 



15,58 

' i5,'o'o' 



17,30 
"8,'72 



15,16 
21,75 



® 9,98 
18,48 



® 9,98 
18,48 



7,70 

's.'gi 



6,98 

'4.'72 



7.70 

's.'gf 

'6.'98' 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

3.50 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2,50 

3.50 



5,79 @ 5,79 



20.00 20.00 



$15.34 $13.99 
"s'.io '"7.'o'5 



$15.44 



$14.24, $15.24 



7.30 



8.30 



19.74 19,49 
©21,75 I ©20,65 
©21,43 I ©20.33 

20.75 I 20,75 
17,90 17.65 
11,40 10,05 



19,74 i 19,74 
©21.75 ©20.90 



®$14.22l 
®14.72 
® 7.30 
® 7.80 
19.74 



$14.24 
"7.'3'o' 



19,74 
!;21,75 ©20,65 ©20,90 



19,74 



©21,53 ©20,58 ©21,33 ©20.33 ©20,58 



16.68 



9.82 



15,16 
21.75 



®11.08 
19,58 



15.33 



17.05 

' 's.ii 



14.91 
21.75 



8.80 



7.02 



8,08 



® 2,05 
@ 1,85 
21,75 
18.84 
® 2.85 
® 3.60 
® 4.25 
® 3.10 
® 3.85 
® 3.65 



® 9,73 
18,23 



7,45 



5,67 



6.73 



© 2.68 

© 2,68 

21,75 

18,59 

® 2,25 



21,10 



8.26 



®13.79 
®14.64 
® 9,55 
©10,40 
©10,36 



® 9,8 
®12,2 



84 
26 
®12.36 
® 7,43 
® 8,28 
® 9,31 
®10.16 



19.06 
10,26 



19.06 
10,26 



® 4.20 ® 3.25 
® 3.25 



13.54 



9.30 



©10.26 



13.54 



9.30 



©10.26 



® 9.74 ® 9.74 
12.26 12.26 



® 7,18 ® 7,18 
® 9,06 ® 9,06 



19,05 
10,26 



2,35 



14,64 



10,40 



©10.26 



® 9.74 
12.26 



3.28 
4.08 
® 4.83 
® 4.33 



19.75 



5.17 



18.81 
10.01 



® 2.88 
@ 2.52 



13.29 



20.75 : 20.75 
17,90 1 17.90 
11.50 10.30 



16.78 
' 16.26 



15,16 
21.75 



®11.18 
19.68 



8.90 



7.12 



8.18 



® 2.00 
® 1.80 
21,75 
18,84 
@ 2,95 
® 3.70 
® 4.30 
@ 3.20 
® 3.95 
@ 3.65 



15.58 



15.00 



17.30 



8.72 



15.16 
21.75 



20,75 20,75 20,75 
17,90 17,90 17.90 
11.30 10.30, 10.30 



16,58 

'i6,'do' 



18,30 
"9.'7'2 



15.16 
21.75 



® 9.98 
18.48 



®10,98 
19,48 



7.70 
'S.'92' 



7,02 



6,98 
'4,'56 



21.75 

18,84 

® 2,50 

3,50 



® 6,92 
® 7.98 
@ 2.25 
® 2.05 
21.75 
18,84 
® 2,75 
@ 3,50 



21,20 



19.06 
10,26 



® 5,79 

"io.'o'd 



® 2.95 

®'3.'7'S 



19,06 
10.26 



21.00 



8.16 



19,06 
10.26 



®1S.58 1 
®16.08 
®15.00 
®15,50 
®17,30 
®17,80 
® 8,72 
® 9,22 
15.16 
21.75 
® 9.98 
®10.48 
®18,48 
®18,98 
® 7,70 
® 8,20 
® 5,92 
® 6,42 
® 6,98 
® 7.48 
6.50 



15.58 

"is. 'do' 
"ii.'sd 
'"k'.ii 

15,16 
21,75 

®'9,'98 
18,48 

"i.'yd 

'"S.'92' 

6.'9'8' 

■"4.'7'd 



21.75 

18,84 

® 2,50 

® 3,00 



21,75 

18,84 

® 2,50 

3.50 



® 6.00 

® 6,50 

19.75 



@ 5.79 
"26.00 



@ 2.40 ;® 3.25 i® 2.30 



14,74 



9,05 



©10.01 



® 9.49 
12,01 



® 8,28 ® 6,93 
®10,16 ® 8,81 



10,50 



©10,26 



13.54 



9.30 



©10.26 



14.54 



10.30 



®10.26 



@ 9.74 ® 9.74 ® 9.74 
12.26 I 12.26 ! 12.26 



® 8.38 ® 7,18 ® 8,18 
©10,26 ® 9,06 ©10,06 



® 7.16 
® 7.66 
® 5.42 
® 5,92 
19,06 
®10,26 
®10,76 
@ 3,65 
@ 4.40 I 
® 4.20 
® 4.34 
®13,54 
©14,04 
® 9,30 
® 9,80 
®10,26 
®10,76 
® 9,74 
®12,26 
®12,76 
® 7.18 
® 7,68 

§9.06 
9.56 



7.16 
'5,42 



19,06 
10,26 



3.2s 



13,54 
"9,'3d 



©10,26 

®'9,'7'4' 
12.25 

®'7.'l'8 
® 9.06 



W" 



(D Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). Tickets limited 16 days in- @ 

eluding date of sale. @ 

(2) Via Delaware River Bridge. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. <^ 

@ Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). ® Via Delaware River Bridge. @ 

^ Via Monmouth Junction, N. J. ® Via Seaside Park. 'S 

ijj Via Columbia and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). i^D 

ChJ Via Columbia and Delaware River Bridge. '^ 

(a) Via Harrisburg and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). (is) 

(^0J Via Harrisburg and Delaware River Bridge. @ 

6ii Via Pittsburgh. n) Via Blairsville. ^rr) 

(^ Via Seaside Park. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. (»; 



34 



Via Harrisburg. ® Via Pottsville. 

Via Harrisburg and Monmouth Junction. 

From Pennsylvania Station. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

From Ferry Stas. or Hudson Term. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

From Pennsylvania Station. 

From Ferry Stations or Hudson Terminal. 

Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 5 days including date of sale. 

Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

Via Camden. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

Via Camden. 

Via ICinkora. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 



ROUND TRIP FARES 

Tickets limited 6 months from date of sale, except as noted. 



TO 



FROM 













. 


•-» 








iz 


2; 




xt 




^ 


2: 

c 
o 


U 


.5 
"o 




, a 


SZ 




"o 


1 w 


a 


X 


W 



Iz 









1-^ 


>-» 


1 






O 


2: 

g 


J3'-' 


j= a 


d 








^^ 




c4 




z 


^: 


o 


o 


o 



Altoona, Pa. . . . 
Baltimore, Md. 



J15.34 



8.40 



Bradford, Pa. 
Butler, Pa.. . 



Buffalo. N. Y 

Canandaigua. N. Y 
Chambersburg, Pa. 
Clearfield. Pa 



19.74 

ffi21.75 
@21.43 
20.75 
17.90 
11.40 
16.68 



Cresson, Pa 

Cumberland, Md. . 
Delmar, Del 



16.10 



18.40 



Elmira, N. Y.. 

Erie. Pa 

Frederick, Md. 



15.16 

21.75 



Greensburg, Pa. . . 
Harrisburg, Pa. . . 
Lancaster, Pa. . . . 

Lebanon, Pa 

New York, N."y." 



®n.08 
19.58 



Oil City. Pa 

Olean, N. Y 

Philadelphia, Pa. 



v3) 2, 
@ 1. 
21 
18 
@ 2, 
® 3, 



PhiUipsburg, N. J. 
Pittsburgh, Pa!!! ! 



21.10 



Pottsville, Pa.. 
Reading, Pa. . . 



8.26 



Rochester. N. Y. 
Sunbury, Pa. ... 



19.06 
10.26 



Trenton, N. J. 



® 2.30 



Tyrone, Pa 

Washington. D.'c! 
Wilkes-Barre, Pa! ! 



10.40 

©io.'ie 



Williamsport, Pa. 



York. Pa. 



@ 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.28 
®10.16 



$15.49; J1S.49 



8.55 



19.74 

®21.7S 
©21.58 
20.75 
17.90 
11.55 
16.83 



16.25 



18.55 
' '9.97 



8.55 



19.74 
@21.75 
@21.S8 
20.75 
17.90 
11.55 
16.83 



16.25 



18.55 



15.16 

21.75 



15.16 

21.75 



®11.23 (1)11.23 
19.73 19.73 



8.23 



(§) 1.85 
@ 1.65 
21.75 
18.84 
® 3.05 
(2) 3.75 
® 4.35 
® 3.25 
® 3.95 
® 3.65 



8.23 



21.25 



8.41 
'6.67 



19.06 
10.26 



<g) 2.50 



® 1.80 
@ 1.60 
21.75 
18.84 
@ 3.10 
ig 3.75 
® 4.35 
@ 3.25 
@ 3.95 
@ 3.65 



21.25 



8.41 



19.06 
10.26 



14.79 I 14.79 



10.55 I 10.55 
@i6.'26 @i6.26 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.43 
@10.31 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.43 
®10.31 



$14.24 



7.30 



19.74 

®20.90 

@20.58 

' 20.75 

17.90 

10.30 

15.58 



15.00 



17.30 



8.72 



15.16 
21.75 



® 9.98 
18.48 



7.70 



5.92 



6.98 



4.56 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

3.50 



® 5.79 



20,00 



7.16 



5.42 



19.06 
10.26 



$14.24 



7.30 



19.74 
©20.90 
®20.SS 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 
15.58 



15.00 



17.30 



15.16 

21.75 



® 9.98 
18.48 



7.70 



5.92 



4.58 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

3.50 



5.79 



19.06 
10.26 



13.54 13.54 



9.30 

©io.Ve 



® 9.74 

12.26 



9.30 



@10.26 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 7.18® 7.18 
® 9.06 I ® 9.06 



@S14.22; 

®14.72 

® 7.30 

® 7.80 

19.74 

®20.6S 

@20.33 

20.75 

17.90 

10.30 

®15.58 

®16.08 

®15.00 

®15.50 

®17..TO 

®I7.80 

® 8.72 

® 9.22 

15.16 

21.75 

® 9.98 

®10.48 

®18.48 

®18.98 

® 7.70 

® 8.20 

® 5.92 

® 6.42 

® 6.98 

® 7.48 

6.50 



$13.99 

"■y.'o's 



$14.19 
"7.25 



$15.49 
' '8.55 



19.49 

©20.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 



19.69 
1)20.85 
I2O.53 
20.75 
17.85 
10.25 
15.53 



14.75 
'i7.'o'5' 



8.47 



14.95 
'17. '25 

"k'.ii 



14.91 
21.75 



15.11 

21.75 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.00 



® 6.00 

® 6.50 

19.75 



® 7.16 
® 7.66 
® 5.42 
® 5.92 
19.06 
®10.26 
® 10.76 
@ 3.65 
@ 4.40 
® 4.20 
® 4.34 
®13.54 
®14.04 
® 9.30 
® 9.80 



® 9.73 
18.23 



® 9.93 
18.43 



7.45 

's'.ii 



7.65 
'S.'87 



19.74 
i®21.7S 
©21.58 
20.75 
17.90 
11.55 
16.83 



16.25 

' is.'ss 



9.97 



15.16 
21.75 



®11.23 
19.73 



6.73 



6.93 



@ 3.00 

@ 3.00 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 



@ 2.54 

@ 2.54 

21.75 

18.79 

® 2.45 



7.17 



8.23 



@ 4.94 
i9.'75' 



6.91 

's.'i? 



18.81 
10.01 



2.40 



®10.26 
©10.76 
® 9.74 
®12.26 
®12.76 
® 7.18 
® 7.68 
® 9.06 
® 9.56 



13.29 
""9.'o's 

©io.'o'i 



® 9.49 
12.01 



® 6.93 

® 8.81 



® 3.15 

§3.94 
4.69 
@ 4.20 



19.95 



7.11 
'5. .3 7 



19.01 
10.21 



2.75 
2.59 



® 1.70 
@ 1.50 
21.75 
18.84 
® 3.20 
@ 3.75 
® 4.35 
® 3.25 
® 3.95 
® 3.65 



21.25 



8.41 



6.67 



19.06 
10.26 



2.70 



13.49 : 14.79 



9.25 10.55 
©io.'il ©10.26 



® 9.69 
12.21 



® 7.13 
® 9.01 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.43 
®10.3l 



$15.24; $14.39 I $15.49 $14.24 
8.'3'0 I " 7.4's : " S.'s's 1" 7.'3'o' 



19.74 1 19.74! 19.74 i 19.74 

@21.7S i®21.05 ©21.75 ©20.90 
©21.33 l@20.73 !@21.58 ©20.58 

20.75 1 20.75 1 20.75 ' 20.75 
17.90 17.90 i 17.90 1 17.90 
11.30 10.45 11.55 10.30 
16.58 15.73 16.83 15.58 



16.00 



15.16 
21.75 



©10.98 
19.48 



17.45 



8.87 



15.16 
21.75 



16.25 

' is.'ss 



15.16 

21.75 



15.00 

'17. id 



15.16 
21.75 



®10.13 
i 18.63 



©11.23 
19.73 



® 9.98 
18.48 



8.70 

'e.'g'i 



7.98 



@ 2.20 
@ 2.00 
21.75 
18.84 
® 2.75 
@ 3.50 



® 2.95 

®'3.'6'5 

"21.00' 



8.16 



19.06 
10.26 



6.07 



7.13 



@ 2.30 

@ 2.30 

21.75 

18.84 

® 2.65 



8.95 
' 7.'l'7 

's.'ii 



@ 2.93 
® 3.70 
® 4.45 
® 3.98 



20.15 



7.31 



5.57 



19.06 
10.26 



@ 2.20 @ 2.53 
~ 2.77 



14.54 

io.'id 

©io.'ie 



® 9.74 

12.26 



® 8.18 
©10.06 



9.45 
®i6.'26' 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 7.33 
® 9.21 



® 1.95 
@ 1.75 
21.75 
18.84 
@ 3.00 
® 3.75 
® 4.35 
® 3.25 
® 3.95 
@ 3.65 



7.70 
'5.'92' 



6.98 
'4.'6'8 



21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

3.50 



®$13.97' 

®14.47 

® 7.05 

® 7.55 

19.49 

©20.65 

©20.33 

20.75 

17.65 

10.05 

®15.33 

®15.83 

®14.75 

®I5.25 

®17.05 

®17.55 

® 8.72 

® 9.22 

14.91 

21.75 

® 9.73 

®10.23 

®18.23 

®18.73 

® 7.45 

® 7.95 

® 5.67 

® 6.17 

® 6.73 

® 7.23 

6.25 



$13.99 

i.'o's 



19.49 

©20.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 



19.74 19.59 
©21.75 ©20.75 
"21.58 ©20.43 

20.75 20.75 
17.90 17.75 
11.55 10.15 
16.83 15.43 



14.75 

'ii.'o's 



14.91 
21.75 



21.25 



8.41 



6.67 



19.06 
10.26 



@ 2.45 



14.79 



10.55 
@i6.'2'5 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 8.43 
®10.31 



21.75 
18.59 

® 2.25 
® 2.75 



® 9.73 
18.23 



7.45 

's.'e? 



6.73 



@ 2.90 

@ 2.98 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 



tl 5.79 
'26.00' 



7.16 



19.06 
10.26 



® 6.00 1 @ 4.94 
® 6.50 

19.75 19.75 



® 2.50 



13.54 



9.30 
@i6.'2'6 



® 9.74 
12.26 



® 7.18 
® 9.06 



® 6.91 
® 7.41 
® 5.17 
® 5.67 
18.81 
®10.01 
®10.51 
@ 3.65 
@ 4.40 
® 4.20 
® 4.34 
®13.29 
®13.79 
® 9.05 
® 9.55 



6.91 



18.81 
10.01 



® 2.40 



®10.01 
®10.51 
@ 9.49 
®12.01 
®12.51 
® 6.93 
® 7.43 
® 8.81 
® 9.31 



9.05 

©io.'o'i 



$15.49 ! $14.09 
"S.'SS i'"?.'!^ 



16.25 



18.55 



15.16 
21.75 



14.85 



17.15 



15.01 
21.75 



®11.23 .® 9.83 
19.73 ! 18.33 



8.95 



7.17 
'8.23 



® 1.95 
@ 1.75 
21.75 
18.84 
® 3.00 
@ 3.75 
® 4.35 
® 3.25 
® 3.95 
® 3.65 



7.55 



6.83 



21.25 



6.67 



19.06 
10.26 



@ 2.58 

@ 2.58 

21.75 

18.69 

® 2.35 

©'i.'i'g 

@ 3.98 
@ 4.73 
® 4.24 
@ 4.99 
19.85 



7.01 



18.91 
10.11 



2.45 @ 2.79 
~ 2.55 



14.79 13.39 



10.55 9.15 

®i6."26' ©io.'ii 



@ 9.49 ® 9.74,® 9.59 
12.01 12.26 12.11 



® 6.93 
® 8.81 



® 8.43 ® 7.03 
©10.31 ® 8.91 



Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). Tickets limited 16 days in- 
cluding date of sale. 
Via Delaware River Bridge. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 
Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). ® Via Delaware River Bridge. 
Via Monmouth Junction. N. J. ® Via Seaside Park. 

Via Columbia and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). 
Via (Columbia and Delaware River Bridge. 
Via Harrisburg and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). 
Via Harrisburg and Delaware River Bridge. 
Via Pittsburgh. ©) Via Blairsville. 

Via Seaside Park. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 



@ Via Harrisburg. ® Via Pottsville. 

@ Via Harrisburg and Monmouth Junction. 

t^i From Pennsylvania Station. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

© From Ferry Stas. or Hudson Term. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

(§) From Pennsylvania Station. 

;ii) From Ferry Stations or Hudson Terminal. 

(y) Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 5 days including date of sale. 

® Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

(§) Via Camden. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

(S) Via (Tamden. 

® Via Kinkora. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 



35 



#- 



ROUND TKIP FARES 









Tickets liznited 6 months from date of sale, except as noted. 












TO 
FROM 


g .is |z 

0< ». 1 fi. 


■ 1 z 

3 ,3 
g S 

W 1 w 


1 


z ! z 

•a" •§" 

1 ^ 1 


Z 

.3 
■I 

m 


z; 

a 

2 

C/3 


z 

u 

CO 


•—I 
Z 

C 

> 

a 

V) 

B 


^ ^ ^ ' & 

2 i ■§ ■ ■§ 

1 i 1 1 1 ¥ 


.Aitoona. Pa 


S 14.24 $13.99 115.24 


J15.24 


®I13.97 

®14.47 

® 7.05 

® 7.55 

19.49 

©20.65 

©20.33 

20.75 

17.65 

10.05 

®IS.33 

®15.83 

®14.75 

®15.25 

®17.05 

®17.5S 


J13.99 


$13.99 


$14.24 


$15.24 


®$13.97 

®14.47 

® 7.05 

® 7.55 

19.49 

©20.65 

©20.33 

20.75 

17.65 

10.05 

®15.33 

©15.83 

®14.75 

®15.25 

®17.05 

®17.55 

® 8.72 

® 9.22 

14.91 

21.75 

® 9.73 

©10.23 

®18.23 

®18.73 

® 7.45 

® 7.95 

® 5.67 

® 6.17 

® 6.73 

® 7.23 

6.25 


$14.24 


$13.99 


$14.24 $15.49 


®$14.22! ®$14.22 
® 14.72 l(Tll4.72 


Baltimore. Md. . . 


:.M 7.05 1 8.30 


8.30 


7.0S 


7.05 


7.30 


8.30 


7.30 


7.05 


7.30 8.55 


® 7.30 

® 7.80 

19.74 

©20.65 

©20.33 

20.75 

17.90 

10.30 

®15.58 

®16.08 

®15.00 

®15.50 

®17.30 

®17.80 

® 8.72 

® 9.22 

15.16 

21.75 

® 9.98 


® 7.30 
® 7.80 


Bradford, Pa 

Butler, Pa 

Buffalo. n;y!!!:: : 

Canandaigua. N. Y 

Chambersburg, Pa 

Clearfield, Pa 


10.74 
120.90 
i.iO.SS 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 
15.58 


19.49 
®20.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 


19.74 
©21.75 
©21.33 
20.75 
17.90 
11.30 
16.58 


19.74 
©21.75 
©21.33 
20.75 
17.90 
11.30 
16.58 


19.49 
©20.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 


19.49 
(m;i2Q.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 


19.74 
©20.90 
©20.58 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 
15.58 


19.74 
©21.75 
©21.33 
20.75 
17.90 
11.30 
16.58 


19.74 
©20.90 
©20.58 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 
15.58 


19.49 

©20.65 
©20.33 
20.75 
17.65 
10.05 
15.33 


19.74 
©20.90 
©20.58 
20.75 
17.90 
10.30 
15.58 


19.74 

©21.75 
©21.58 
20.75 
17.90 
11.55 
16.83 


19.74 

©20.65 

©20.33 

20.75 

17.90 

10.30 

®15.58 

® 16.08 


Cresson, Pa 


15.00 


14.75 


16.00 


16.00 


14.75 


14.75 


15.00 


16.00 


15.00 


14.75 


15.00 


16.25 


®15.00 
®15.50 


Cumberland, Md 


17.30 


17.05 


18.30 


18.30 


17.05 


17.05 


17.30 


18.30 


ir.sd 


17.05 


17.30 


18.55 


®17.30 
®17.80 


Delmar, Del 


8.72 8.47 


9.72 


9.72 


® 8.72 

® 9.22 

14.91 

21.75 

rs-, Q 7.^ 


8.47 


8.47 


8.72 


9.72 


8.72 


8.47 


8.72 


9.97 


® 8.72 
® 9.22 


Elmira, N. Y 

Erie, Pa 

Frederick, Md 


15.16 14.91 
21.75 21.75 


15.16 
21.75 


15.16 

21.75 


14.91 
21.75 


14.91 

21.75 


15.16 

21.75 


15.16 

21.75 


15.16 
21.75 


14.91 
21.75 


15.16 
21.75 


15.16 

21.75 

©11.23 

©11.23 

19.73 


15.16 

21.75 

(Tl 08 


Greensburg, Pa 


® 9.98 
18.48 


® 9.73 
18.23 


®10.98 
19.48 


® 10.98 |®10.23 

19.48 ® 18.23 

(7118.7.1 


® 9.73 
18.23 


® 9.73 
18.23 


® 9.98 
18.48 


®i6.98 
19.48 


® 9.98 
18.48 


® 9.73 
18.23 


® 9.98 
18.48 


® 10.48 ®l6.48 
®18.48;®18.48 
® 18.98 !® 18.98 


Harrisburg, Pa 


7.70 


7.45 


8.70 


8.70 


® 7.45 
® 7.95 
® 5.67 
® 6.17 
® 6.73 
® 7.23 
6.25 

"ii'.is 

18.59 

® 2.25 
® 2.75 


7.45 


7.45 


7.70 


8.70 


17.70 


7.45 


17.70 


8.95 


® 7.70 ® 7.70 
® 8.20 ® 8.20 


Lancaster, Pa 


5.92 


5.67 


6.92 


6.92 


5.67 


5.67 


S.92 


6.92 


5.92 


5.67 


5.92 


7.17 


® 5.92 1® 5.92 
® 6.42 ® 6.42 


Lebanon, Pa 


6.98 


6.73 


7.98 


7.98 


6.73 


6.73 


6.98 


7.98 


6.98 


6.73 


6.98 


8.23 


® 6.98 ® 6.98 
® 7.48 ® 7.48 


New York, N. Y 


4.56 

'2i.'75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.50 


@ 2.90 

@ 2.98 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 


@ 2.30 
@ 2.10 
21.75 
18.84 
® 2.75 
@ 3.50 
® 4.25 
® 2.85 


® 2.20 
® 2.00 
21.75 
18.84 
@ 2.75 
@ 3.50 


@2.64 

@ 2.64 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.30 


@ 2.72 

® 2.72 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 


4.66 

"2i.'7'5' 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.50 


@ 2.15 
@ 1.95 
21.75 
18.84 
® 2.75 
@ 3.50 


4.42 


@ 3.00 

@ 3.00 

21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 


4.50 


® 1.70 
@ 1.50 
21.75 
18.84 
® 3.15 
@ 3.75 
® 4.35 
® 3.25 


6.50 1 6.50 


Oil City, Pa 

Olean, N. Y 

Philadelphia, Pa 


21.75 

18.59 

® 2.25 

® 2.75 


21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.50 


21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.50 


21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.00 


21.75 

18.84 

® 2.50 

® 3.00 


« 


® 3.24 
@ 4.04 
® 4.79 
® 4.29 

"i9.'7'5' 


@ 3.31 
@ 4.12 
® 4.87 
® 4.36 
® 4.94 
19.75 




« 






@ 3.00 
® 3.75 
@ 3.65 


; . ; 

® 5.'75' 

® 6.25 

19.75 


@'5.'7'9 


@ 3.00 
® 3.75 
® 3.65 














« 














® 3.95 
® 3.65 






Phillipsburg, N. J 


® 5.79 


@ 4.89 


® 3.80 


® 5.75 

® 6.25 

19.75 


® 5.75 


@ 4.79 




® 6.00 

® 6.50 

19.75 


® 6.00 
® 6.50 


Pittsburgh, Pa 


20.00 


19.75 


21.00 


21.00 


20.00 


21.00 


20.00 


19.75 


20.00 


21.25 


19.75 


Pottsville, Pa 


7.16 


6.91 


8.16 


8.16 


® 6.91 
® 7.41 
® 5.17 
® 5.67 
18.81 
®10.01 
®10.51 
® 3.40 
@ 4.15 
® 3.95 
® 4.09 
®13.29 
®13.79 
® 9.05 
® 9.55 

®i6.'o'i' 

®10.S1 
® 9.49 
®12.01 
®12.51 
® 6.93 
® 7.43 
® 8.81 
© 9.31 


6.91 


6.91 


7.16 


8.16 


® 6.91 
® 7.41 
® 5.17 
® 5.67 
18.81 
®10.01 
®10.51 
@ 3.40 
© 4.15 
® 3.95 
® 4.09 
®13.29 
®13.79 
® 9.05 
® 9.55 

®i6.'o'i' 

®10.51 
@ 9.49 
®12.01 
®12.51 
® 6.93 
® 7.43 
® 8.81 
® 9.31 


7.16 


6.91 


7.16 


8.41 


® 7.16 
® 7.66 
® 5.42 
® 5.92 
19.06 
®10 26 
®10.76 
@ 3.65 
@ 4.40 
® 4.20 
® 4.34 
®13.54 
®14.04 


® 7.16 
® 7.66 


Reading, Pa 


5.42 


5.17 


6.42 


6.42 


5.17 


5.17 


5.42 


6.42 


5.42 


5.17 


S.42 


6.67 


® 5.42 
® 5.92 


Rochester, N. Y 

Sunbury, Pa 


19.06 
10.26 


18.81 
10.01 


19.06 
10.26 


19.06 
10.26 


18.81 
10.01 


18.81 
10.01 


19.06 
10.26 


19.06 
10.26 


19.06 
10.26 


18.81 
10.01 


19.06 
10.26 


19.06 
10.26 


19.06 
®10.26 
®10.76 


Trenton, N. J 


® 3.2S 


® 2.35 


® 2.35 


® 2.20 


® 2.84 
® 2.53 


@ 2.91 
@ 2.50 


® 3.25 


® 2.30 


@ 3.21 


@ 2.25 




® 2.65 


@ 3.65 
@ 4.40 


u 






















® 4.20 


" 



























® 4.34 


Tyrone, Pa 


13.54 


13.29 


14.54 


14.54 


13.29 


13.29 


13.54 


14.54 


13.54 


13.29 


13.54 


14.79 


®13.54 
(7)14.04 


Washington, D. C 


9.30 


9.05 


10.30 


10.30 


9.05 


9.05 


9.30 


10.30 


9.30 


9.05 


9.30 


10.55 


® 9.30,® 9.30 
® 9.80 1 ® 9.80 


Wilkes-Barre, Pa 


©10.26 


©10.01 


©10.26 


©10.26 


©10.01 


©10.01 


©10.26 


©10.26 


©10.26 


©10.01 


©10.26 


©10.26 


1 . . 




®10.26|® 10.26 


« 


























©10.76 !«10.76 
© 9.74 ® 9.74 
®12.26 ®12.26 
®12.76 ®12.76 
® 7.18i® 7.18 
® 7.68 1® 7.68 


WilliamsporV, Pa.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. '. '. '. 


® 9.74 
12.26 


® 9.49 
12.01 


® 9.74 
12.26 


@ 9.74 
12.26 


@ 9.49 
12.01 


® 9.49 
12.01 


@ 9.74 
12.26 


® 9.74 
12.26 


® 9.74 
12.26 


® 9.49 
12.01 


® 9.74 
12.26 


® 9.74 
12.26 


York, Pa 


® 7.18 
® 9.06 


® 6.93 
® 8.81 


® 8.18 
@ 10.06 


® 8.18 
® 10.06 


® 6.93 
® 8.81 


® 6.93 
® 8.81 


® 7.18 
® 9.06 


® 8.18 
©10.06 


® 7.18 
® 9.06 


® 6.93 
® 8.81 


® 7.18 
® 9.06 


® 8.43 
@10.31 




® 9.06 (f) 9.06 


" 




























© 9.56 


@ 9.56 



Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). Tickets limited 16 days in- 
cluding date of sale. 
Via Delaware River Bridge. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 
Via Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). ® Via Delaware River Bridge. 
Via Monmouth Junction, N. J. (e) Via Seaside Park. 

Via Columbia and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). 
Via Columbia and Delaware River Bridge. 
Via Harrisburg and Philadelphia (Market Street Wharf). 
Via Harrisburg and Delaware River Bridge. 

Via Pittsburgh. (li) Via Blairsville. 

Via Seaside Park. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 



Via Harrisburg. ® Via Pottsville. 

Via Harrisburg and Monmouth Junction. 

Prom Pennsylvania Station. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

From Ferry Stas. or Hudson Term. Tickets unlimited continuous passage. 

From Pennsylvania Station. 

From Ferry Stations or Hudson Terminal. 

Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 5 days including date of sale. 

Via Monmouth Junction. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

Via Camden. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 

Via Camden. 

Via Kinkora. Tickets limited 16 days including date of sale. 



36 



KOUND TRIP FARES 



Tickets sold May 1 to October 15. inclusive, good to return until October 31, inclusive, except as noted. 



\^ TO 


DELAWARE, 
AND V! 


MARYLAND 
RGINIA. 


ALLEGHENY AND 
BLUE MOUNTAINS. 




CHAUTAUQUA LAKE. 




FROM \^^ 


>. 

'0 

n 

o 


c 

3 

u 

¥ 

o 


Q 

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CO 

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5 


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8 


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J8.00 
11.70 
10.66 
6.50 
19.75 
10.00 


*I8.20 
*!1.00 
*15.00 
*11.00 
*22.20 
* 8.20 


J6.90 
10.45 
9.41 
5.25 
19.75 
8.90 


J9.45 
12.25 
16.25 
12.25 
23.45 
9.45 


$10.95 

7.56 

16.45 

12.50 

7.65 

10.95 


J11.42 
7.41 
16.30 
12.35 
5.26 
13.32 


J5.50 
1.28 
8.64 
4.48 

13.58 
7.50 


118.50 
14.95 
21.53 
17.50 
8.00 
20.50 


$18.50 
14.95 
21.53 
17.50 
8.00 
20.50 


$18.50 
14.95 
21.53 
17.50 
8.00 
20.50 


$18.50 
14.95 
21.53 
17.50 
8.00 
20.50 


$18.50 
14.95 
21.53 
17.50 
8.00 
20.50 


$18 50 




14.95 




21.53 


Philadelphia Pa 


17 50 




8.00 


Washington. D. C 


2l).5U 



LONG ISLAND. 




KHOM 



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Baltimore. Md . . . 
Harrisburg. Pa. . . 
'.\ewark, N. J . . 
Philadelphia. Pa. 
Pittsburgh. Pa. . . 
WashinKt'iii.D. C. 



$14.63 

15.03 

5.87 

9.83 

27.33 

16.63 



$I0.9S $10.15 $11.24 $11.45 

11.64 11.85 

2. 48 2.69 

6.44 6.65 

23.94 24.15 

13.24 13.45 



11.38 


10.55 


2.22 


1.39 


6.18 


5.35 


23.68 


22.85 


12.98 


12.15 



$12.30 

12.70 

3.54 

7.50 

25.00 

14.30 



$12.04 $14.14 '$12.73 $11.00 



12.44 

3.28 

7.24 

22.74 

14.04 



14.54 

5.38 

9.34 

26.84 

16.14 



13.13 

3.99 

7.93 

25.43 

14.73 



11.40 

2.24 

6.20 

23.70 

13.00 



$13.67 

14.07 

4.91 

8.87 

26.37 

15.67 



;i4.46 

14.86 

5.70 

9.66 

27.16 

16.46 



$12.80 

13.20 

4.04 

8.00 

25.50 

14.80 



$10.15 $10.54 



10.55 
1.39 

5.35 
22.85 
12.15 



10.94 

1.78 

5.74 

23.24 

12.54 



$10.32 

10.72 

1.56 

5.52 

23.02 

12.32 



$13.52 

13.92 

4.76 

8.72 

26.22 

15.52 



$14.12$11.13$11.S7 



14.52 

5.36 

9.32 

26.82 

16.12 



1l.53| 11.97 

2.37 2.81 

6.33| 6.77 

23.83 24.27 

13.13| 13.57 



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Baltimore, Md. . . 


$13.32 


$10.30 


$10.85 


$13.52 


$11.38 


$11.05 


$12.11 


$12.27 


$13.27 


$13.07 


$14.38 


$11.91 


$10.73 


$12.15 


ill. 80 


$13.68 


$13.87 


$13.91 


1 

$14.01 $13.13 


Harrisburg, Pa. . . 


13.72 


10.70 


11.25 


13.92 


11.78 


11.45 


12.51 


12.67 


13.67 


13.47 


14.78 


12.31 


11.13 


12.55 


12.20 


14.08 


14.27 


14.31 


14.41 


13.53 


■N*nvark. N. J . . . 


4.56 


1.54 


2.09 


4.76 


2.62 


2.29 


3.35 


3.51 


4.51 


4.31 


5.62 


3.15 


1.97 


3.39 


3.04 


4.92 


5.11 


5.15 


5.25 


4.37 


Philadelphia, Pa. . 


8.52 


5.50 


6.05 


8.72 


6.58 


6.25 


7.31 


7.47 


8.47 


8.27 


9.58 


7.11 


5.93 


7.35 


7.00 


8.88 


9.07 


9.11 


9.21 


8.33 


Pittsburgh, Pa 


26.02 


23.00 


23.55 


26.22 


24.08 


23.75 


24.81 


24.97 


25.97 


25.77 


27.08 


24.61 


23.43 


24.85 


24.50 


26.38 


26.57 


26.61 


26.71 


25.83 


Washington, D. C. 


15.32 


12.30 


12.85 


15.52 


13.38 


13.05 


14.11 


14.27 


15.27 


15.07 


16.38 


13.91 


12.73 


14.15 


13.80 


15.68 


15.87 


15.91 


16.01 


15.13 



DELAWARE VALLEY AND POCONO MOUNTAINS. 



TO 



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*$10.56 


$10.66 


* 9.16 


9.26 


* 5.76 


5.86 


*21.46 




*12.S6 


12.66 







^" 
















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Baltimore, Md. . . . 
Harrisburg. Pa ... . 
Philadelphia. Pa. . 
Pittsburgh , Pa . . . . 
Washington, D. C. 



$10.16 


$10.61 


$10.26 


8.76 


9.21 


8.86 


5.36 


5.81 


5.46 




21.51 


21.16 


12.16 


12.61 


12.26 



$10.56 


$10.76 


$10.36 


$10.36 


*$10.5<) 


$10.46 


9.16 


10.16 


8.96 


8.96 


* 9.46 


9.06 


5.76 


6.76 


5.56 


5.56 


* 6.06 


5.66 


21.46 


22.46 


21.26 


21.26 


*21.76 


21.36 


12.56 


12.76 


12.36 


12.36 


*12.56 


12.46 



*$10.S6 

* 9.56 

* 6.16 
*21.86 
*12.56 



10.86 


9.46 


6.06 


21.76 


12.86 



*$9.96 

8.56 

5.16 

*20.86 

*11.96 



$10.56 


$10.76 


9.86 


9.36 


6.46 


5.96 


22.16 


21.66 


12.70 


12.76 



*$9.76 

* 8.36 

* 4.96 
*20.66 
*11.76 



■ Fares apply via Pennsylvania Station; via Hudson Terminal and Ferry Stations twenty cents 
* Limit, six months from date of sale. 



37 



INFORMATION 



Tlie fares quoted in this folder from principal stations on the Pennsylvania 
Railroad cover excursion tickets on sale during the Summer Season of 1915. 

Full information concerning dates of sale, return limits, routes, stop-over privileges and fares from other stations 
may Ix- obtained from any Ticket Agent, or the following representatives: 



OLIVER T. BOYO, Division Passenger Agent, 

263 Fifth Ave. (Cor. 29th St.). New York. N. Y. 

Roy L. Stall. District Passenger SoUcitor, 

263 Fifth Ave. (Cor. 29th St.), New York, N. Y. 

W. V. KiBBE, District Passenger Solicitor. 

501 Fifth Ave. (below 42d Street). New York, N. Y. 

W. P. H.\RRIM.\N, District Passenger Solicitor, 
170 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 

F. E. BiN.vs. District Passenger Solicitor, 336 Fulton 
Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

C. E. McCuLLOUGH. District Passenger Solicitor, Essex 

Building (Cor. Clinton and Beaver Streets). 
Newark, N. J. 

W. W. Porter, Passenger Solicitor, 129 Church Street, 
Second National Bank Building, New Haven, Conn. 

RODNEY MACDONOUGH. New England Passenger Agent. 
5 Bronitield Street, Boston, Mass. 

F. B. BARNITZ, Division Passenger Agent. 

14!.i Chestnut Street. Philadelphia. Pa. 

D. M. Sheaffer. District Passenger Solicitor, 
1433 Chestnut Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 



WM. PEORICK, Jr., Division Passenger Agent. 

N. E Cor. Baltimore and Calvert Streets, 
Baltimore, Md. 

T. L. LiPSETT. District Passenger Solicitor, 
15th and C Streets, Washington. D. C. 

*. E. BUCHANAN, Division Passenger Agent, 

300 Telegraph Building. Harrisburg, Pa. 

A. C. Weile, District Passenger Solicitor, 
15 North Fifth Street. Reading. Pa. 

DAVID TODD, Division Passenger Agent, 
Williamsport. Pa. 

E. YUNGMAN, Division Passenger Agent, 

Room 212 Oliver Building, Pittsburgh, Pa. 

B. P. ERASER, Division Passenger Agent, 

60-1 Brisbane Building, Buffalo. N. Y. 

C. B. Brodie, Canadian Passenger Agent, 
56 King Street. West, Toronto, Can. 



New York 



CITY TICKET OFFICES 



Philadelphia 



l!( 

•Si 1 

m 



26.^ Fifth Avenue (Cor. 29th Street). 
501 Fifth Avenue (Fifth Avenue and 

42d Street). 

The above offices are open until 
10.00 P. M. daily, including 
Sundays and Holidays. 
170 Broadway. 
153 West I25th Street. 
Pennsylvania Station. 
Desbrosses Street Station. 
Cortlandt Street Station. 
Hudson Terminal (Cortlandt and 

Church Streets). 
Thos. Cook & Son, 245 Broadway (Op. 

City Hall). and 2081 Broadway (Cor. 

72d Street). Telephone.7100 Barclay. 

Hrooklyn 

336 Fulton Street. 

Flatbush Avenue (Long Island Rail- 
road) Station, 

Iloboken 

122 River Street. 

Jersey City 

Jersey City Station (Exchange Place). 
Grove Street Station. 
Summit Avenue Station. 

Ne\vark 

Essex Building (Corner Clinton and 

Beaver Streets). 
Market Street StatioQ. 
Park Place. 



838 Chestnut Street. 1 Telephone. Bell 
1433 Chestnut Street. ) Spruce 2670. 
Broad Street Station. 
West Philadelphia Station. 
North Philadelphia Station. 
Market Street Wharf. 
3956 Market Street. 
38 West Chelten Avenue. Germantown. 
Thos. Cook & Son. 137 South Broad 
Street. Telephone. Bell-Walnut 300. 



Camden 

307 Federal Street. 
Federal Street Station. 



Atlantic City 

1301 Pacific Avenue (N. W. Corner 
South Carolina Avenue). 

Station, South Carolina and Atlantic 
Avenues. 



Reading 

16 North Fifth Street. 
At the Station. 



Wilmington 

905 Market Street. 
At the Station. 



lialtlmore 

N. E. Corner Baltimore and Calvert 

Streets. 
Union Station. 
Calvert Station. 

Washington 

Comer Fifteenth and G Streets. 
Union Station. 

Harrisburg 

At the Station. 

Pittsburgh 

Corner Sixth Avenue and Smithfield 

Street. 
Pennsylvania Station. 
East Liberty Station. 

Buffalo 

307 Main Street. Ellicott Square. 
Exchange Street Station. 

Williamsport 

107 West Fourth Street (Elliot Block). 
At the Station. 

Wilkes-Barre 

50 Public Square. 
At the Station. 



GEO, W. BOYD. Passenger Traffic Manager 
,7AS. V. ANDERSON. General Passenger Agent DAVID N. BELL. General Passenger Agent 



5-7-15. 3500. 



$8 



ALLEN, LANE II 6 



w- 



Vacation Days 



in the 



Picturesque Delaware Valley 




The beautiful stretch of terrilory, f n )m Trenton 
to Manunka Chunk, embraces a higliland region 
of great natural scenic attraction, where winding 
river and untUdating landscape combine to pre- 
sent vistas of Ijeauly unsurpassed in Eastern 
PennsyK'ania or Northern New Jersey. 

Descriptive of this inviting section, the Passen- 
ger Department of the PennsyKania Railroad 
has just issued an illustrated foldiT brimhd of in- 
formation which 

Will aid you in planning 
your Summer Vacation 

It gives a list of Summer hotels and boarding 
houses, with the rates ot each. 

It embraces a table of railroad fares, a map of 
the territory described, tells of the location of 
bridges over the river and gives the names and 
addresses of owners of available land, and prices 
of rental by the week, season, month or year. 

It gives the location of islands in the Delaware 
river and picturesque shore jiropcrty, specially 
adapted for camping sites or the erection of 
bungalows. 

It gives the cost of rental or purchase of camp- 
ing outfits and in brief, concise form, tells just 
what you wisii to know of out-door life in this 
beautiful section of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. 

Copies of this folder may be had of ticket agents 
of Pennsylvania Railroad or by addressing 

DAVID N. BELL 

General Passenger Agent 
Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, Pa. 



THE CALIFORNIA 
EXPOSITIONS 

Panama-Pacific Intcniatifjiial Exposition 
San Francisco 



Panama-Ca 1 i f < )rn ia Exposition 
San Diego 



Tour to the Expositions leaves the East 
August 7 

\'isiting the Grand Canyon of Arizona, with 
its myriad wonders, trail trips and carriage drives; 
Redlands and Riverside in the heart of the 
orange growing district of California; P.ANAMA- 
California Exposition at San Diego; Los 
Angeles; Santa Barbara and Del Monte, 
the famous resorts of the Pacific Coast; the 
California Big Trees; San Francisco, with 
four days at the Panama-Pacific Exposition; 
Salt Lake City; Glenwood Springs and 
Colorado Springs in the Colorado Rockies; 
Denver and Chicago. 

A 24-day personally conducted tour by Special 
Train, pro\iding every possible comfort and con- 
^'enience, willi all details of tra\'el arranged for 
in advance. 

Round trip fares, including transportation, 
Pullman accommodations (one double berth), 
all meals in dining car, carriage drives, automo- 
bile rides and side trips included in itinerary, 
and hotel accommodations (room and meals) at 
Los Angeles and rooms and breakfast only in 
San Francisco. 

New York, $290.00 Philadelphia, $286.40 

Baltimore or Washington, S2S4.15 

Proportionate Tares from other points 

Full details may be obtained of Pennsylvania 
Railroad representatives named on preceding 
page, or 

JAS. P. ANDERSON 

General Passenger Agent 
Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, Pa. 




40 Beaches 
OF New Jersey 



AND OTHER 



Highland and Water. Resorts 

Reached Directly 

BY THE 

PENNSYLVANIA 
RAILROAD 



